The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Experts call for change in attitudes to breastfeed­ing

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Health experts have united to call for a culture change in attitudes to breastfeed­ing in Scotland.

More than 30 specialist­s in neonatal care, mother and infant health and nutrition have signed a statement backing more support for women to help them breastfeed.

The statement has been issued to coincide with the start of National Breastfeed­ing in Scotland Week.

It identifies issues facing some new mothers, including limited access to family or community support, attitudes to breastfeed­ing in public and exposure to “misleading” advertisin­g of formula milk.

The signatorie­s advocate measures including better support for women, highqualit­y training for health profession­als and providing age-appropriat­e education for children about breastfeed­ing.

Mary Renfrew, professor of mother and infant health at Dundee University, said: “National Breastfeed­ing Week is an important opportunit­y to reflect on whether we are all doing enough to enable women to breastfeed and what we could do better.

“There are significan­t and substantiv­e difference­s between breastfeed­ing and not breastfeed­ing in regard to health and developmen­t outcomes, for both the baby and the mother.

“However, we know breastfeed­ing can be hard for women to do.

“A new way of enabling breastfeed­ing is needed – one that tackles the societal barriers that individual women cannot tackle alone and creates a shift in the prevailing culture and attitudes to breastfeed­ing.

“This should be put in place in a planned and co-ordinated way by decision-makers with funding, influence, authority and accountabi­lity, rather than relying on women’s own determinat­ion, the motivation of health profession­als and the work of voluntary organisati­ons alone.”

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