The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Shortage highlights series of racial disparitie­s

- By Jacquelyn Martin, Adriana Gomez Licon and Terry Tang

COLUMBIA, MD. » Capri Isidoro broke down in tears in the office of a lactation consultant.

The mother of two had been struggling to breastfeed her 1-month-old daughter since she was born, when the hospital gave the baby formula first without consulting her on her desire to breastfeed.

Now, with massive safety recall and supply disruption­s causing formula shortages across the United States, she also can’t find the specific formula that helps with her baby’s gas pains.

“It is so sad. It shouldn’t be like this,” said Isidoro, who lives in the Baltimore suburb of Ellicott City. “We need formula for our kid, and where is this formula going to come from?”

As parents across the United States struggle to find formula to feed their children, the pain is particular­ly acute among Black women and Latinas. Black women have historical­ly faced obstacles to breastfeed­ing,

including:

• a lack of lactation support in the hospital,

•more pressure to formula feed, and

• cultural roadblocks. It is one of many inequaliti­es for Black mothers: They are far more likely to die from pregnancy complicati­ons, and less likely to have their concerns about pain taken seriously by doctors.

Low-income families buy the majority of formula in the U.S., and face a particular struggle: Experts fear

small neighborho­od grocery stores that serve these vulnerable population­s are not replenishi­ng as much as larger retail stores, leaving some of these families without the resources or means to hunt for formula.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 20% of Black women and 23% of Latinas exclusivel­y breastfeed through six months, compared to 29% of white women. The overall rate stands at 26%.

Hospitals that encourage breastfeed­ing and overall lactation support are less prevalent in Black neighborho­ods, according to the CDC.

The Associatio­n of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses also says Black women and Latinas classified as low wage workers have less access to lactation support in their workplaces.

In the U.S. past, the demands of slave labor prevented mothers from nursing their children, and slave owners separated mothers from their own babies to have them serve as wet nurses, breastfeed­ing other women’s children.

In the 1950s, racially targeted commercial­s falsely advertised formula as a superior source of nutrition for infants. And studies continue to show that the babies of Black mothers are more likely to be introduced to formula in hospitals than the babies of white mothers, which happened to Isidoro after her emergency cesarean section.

Physicians say introducin­g formula means the baby will require fewer feedings from the mother, decreasing the milk supply as the breast is not stimulated enough to produce.

Andrea Freeman, author of the book “Skimmed: Breastfeed­ing, Race and Injustice,” said these mothers still aren’t getting the support they need when it comes to having the choice of whether to breastfeed or use formula. They also may have jobs that do not accommodat­e the time and space needed for breastfeed­ing or pumping milk, Freeman said.

“Nobody’s taking responsibi­lity for the fact that they’ve steered families of color toward formula for so many years and made people rely on it and taken away choice. And then when it falls apart, there’s not really any recognitio­n or accountabi­lity,” Freeman said.

Breastfeed­ing practices are often influenced by previous generation­s, with some studies suggesting better outcomes for mothers who were breastfed when they were babies.

Kate Bauer, an associate professor of nutritiona­l sciences at the University of Michigan School of Public

Health, said she began hearing in February about Black and Latino families in Detroit and Grand Rapids feeling stuck after finding smaller grocery stores running out of formula.

Some were told to go to the local office of the Special Supplement­al Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, better known as WIC, the federal program that supports lowincome expectant and new mothers. Between 50% and 65% of the formula in the U.S. is bought through the program.

“Going to the WIC office is like a full day’s errand for some moms,” Bauer said.

She fears mothers are getting desperate enough to try foods that are not recommende­d for babies under 6 months.

Yury Navas, a Salvadoran immigrant who works at a restaurant and lives in Laurel, Md., says she was not able to produce enough breast milk and struggled to find the right formula for her nearly 3-month-old baby Jose Ismael, after others caused vomiting, diarrhea and discomfort.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Olivia Isidoro, 6, watches her 1-month-old baby sister Charlotte be checked by Ann Faust, a lactation consultant, during their mother Capri Isidoro’s lactation consultati­on in Columbia, Md. Charlotte was delivered via emergency cesarean section and given formula at a hospital.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Olivia Isidoro, 6, watches her 1-month-old baby sister Charlotte be checked by Ann Faust, a lactation consultant, during their mother Capri Isidoro’s lactation consultati­on in Columbia, Md. Charlotte was delivered via emergency cesarean section and given formula at a hospital.

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