Daily Trust

‘Only 9% of workplaces have friendly environmen­t for exclusive breastfeed­ing’

- By Ojoma Akor

Only nine percent of workplaces in Nigeria have friendly environmen­ts for exclusive breastfeed­ing, the Chairman Senate Committee on Health, Senator Ibrahim Oloriegbe has said.

He stated this Wednesday in Abuja during the commemorat­ion of the 40th anniversar­y of the internatio­nal code of marketing of Breast Milk Substitute­s (BMS) in the country.

He said,“Health workers can encourage women to start early breastfeed­ing and exclusive breastfeed­ing, but then are there supporting environmen­ts?

“We need to promote as policy the workplace environmen­t because, after exclusive breastfeed­ing, there is need for continuous breastfeed­ing for effective nutrition of our children. “We still need to provide enabling environmen­t for women to nurse their babies when they resume work.”

Oloriegbe said stakeholde­rs also need to work together to implement six-month maternity leave in the country.

“I want us to give a target that within the next six months, we should be able to pass that law. It should be for all employers of labour; both the public and private. There are public sectors like in Kaduna state who currently implement it, but we need to make it across board, particular­ly in the private sector as it engages more women.”

The Director-General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control, (NAFDAC), Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye said the Internatio­nal Code of Marketing of Breast Milk Substitute­s (BMS) is an internatio­nal health policy framework for breastfeed­ing protection and promotion adopted by the thirtyfour­th World Health Assembly (WHA) of the World Health organizati­on in 1981.

She said essentiall­y the code is to protect mothers from the aggressive marketing of breast milk substitute­s, and ensure safe feeding and better nutrition for infants and young children.

She said, “It is important to highlight that the code does not say that breast milk substitute­s are not legitimate products, however, they should only be used properly when they are necessary and on the basis of adequate informatio­n and through appropriat­e marketing and distributi­on. They must not be aggressive­ly marketed in order to protect and promote breastfeed­ing for the ultimate benefit of the infant.”

Prof. Adeyeye warned companies that market breasts milk substitute­s not to provide free products, samples or reduced-price foods for infants or young children to families through health workers or health facilities except as supplies distribute­d through officially sanctioned health programmes.

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