The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

‘Breastfeed­ing link to Covid-19 negligible’

- With newborns.

THE risk of Covid-19 infection from breastfeed­ing is negligible and has never been documented, the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) said on Tuesday, in a call for greater support for the practice.

The appeal, during World Breastfeed­ing Week, comes as WHO warned that not using mother’s milk is linked to 820 000 child deaths a year, at a cost to the global economy of US$ 300 billion.“WHO has been very clear in its recommenda­tions to say absolutely breastfeed­ing should continue,” said Dr Laurence Grummer-Strawn, head of the WHO’s Food and Nutrition Action in Health Systems unit.

“We have never documented, anywhere around the world, any (Covid19) transmissi­on through breastmilk.”

No substitute Exclusive breastfeed­ing for six months has many benefits for the infant and mother which far outweigh any risk from the new coronaviru­s pandemic, according to WHO. These advantages include the fact that breastmilk — including milk which is expressed — provides life-saving antibodies that protect babies against many childhood illnesses.

This is only one of the reasons why new mothers should initiate“skin-toskin contact”and“room-in”with their babies quickly, as “the risks of transmissi­on of the Covid-19 virus from a Covid-19 positive mother to her baby seem to be extremely low,” added Dr Grummer-Strawn.

Having tested the breastmilk of “many” mothers around the world in a variety of studies, the WHO official explained that although a few samples had contained the virus, “when they followed up to see whether the virus was actually viable and could be infective, they could not find any actual infective virus”.

Underscori­ng the WHO’s longstandi­ng support for using mother’s milk over substitute­s, Dr Grummer-Strawn also warned that the pandemic had weakened essential breastfeed­ing support usually provided to families

Covid-19 ‘underminin­g

essential support’

“The interrupti­on of services has been tremendous around the world providing the kind of support mothers normally would get with breastfeed­ing,” Dr Grummer-Strawn told journalist­s.

“Oftentimes, the health services that would provide maternal child health have been diverted to take care of the Covid-19 response; sometimes families do not feel comfortabl­e in going into the health services, because they are afraid that they might get Covid-19 and so they do not come for the routine kinds of support.”

According to the WHO, “about 820 000 children’s lives are lost every year because of a lack of breastfeed­ing”, Dr Grummer-Strawn continued, in reference to deaths among underfives.

“Economical­ly, there are losses of about US$ 300 billion a year in economic productivi­ty, lost because of a lack of breastfeed­ing,” he added.

Numerous good things come from breastfeed­ing — for the child and their mother in developing and industrial­ised countries — WHO has long maintained.

It has insisted that “it is not safer to give infant formula milk”, together with UN Children’s Fund ( UNICEF) and the Internatio­nal Baby Food Action Network ( IBFAN).

Benefits for baby and mother The three organisati­ons have united in their call to Government­s to protect and promote women’s access to skilled breastfeed­ing counsellin­g, for World Breastfeed­ing Week 2020 (August 1 to 7).

“Breastfeed­ing provides benefits during the time of breastfeed­ing, and those that are most recognised are protection against diarrhoea, which is one of the top causes of mortality in low-income countries, protection against respirator­y infections, against obesity — childhood obesity later on — as children get older, protection against leukaemia,” said Dr Grummer-Strawn.

Breastfeed­ing also protects the mother against breast cancer, ovarian cancer, Type 2 diabetes later on, the WHO official said,“so there are benefits for both the mother and the baby, and when we added these up it comes out to about 820 000 lives around the world, even in high-income countries”.

In addition to the pandemic, breastfeed­ing is under pressure from what WHO and UNICEF have described as harmful promotion of breast-milk substitute­s.

Countries could do more to protect parents from misleading informatio­n, the UN agencies believe.

“We continue to be very concerned about the practices of the formula industries, both the big multinatio­nal corporatio­ns as well as in many countries there are local manufactur­ers of breastmilk substitute­s that are trying to get mothers to get on to their products,” said Dr Grummer-Strawn.

“They use a number of tricks, sometimes it is not as blatant advertisin­g as it once was, because they know that they can get caught.”

According to WHO, of 194 countries analysed, 136 have legal measures related to the Internatio­nal Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitute­s and subsequent resolution­s adopted by the World Health Assembly (known as the Code).

Tricks of the trade

However, only 79 countries prohibit the promotion of breast-milk substitute­s in health facilities, and only 51 have provisions that prohibit the distributi­on of free or low-cost supplies within the health care system, WHO

said in a report published in May.

Only 19 countries have prohibited the sponsorshi­p of scientific and health profession­al associatio­n meetings by manufactur­ers of breast-milk substitute­s, which include infant formula, follow-up formula, and growing up milks marketed for use by infants and children up to 36-months old, the UN health agency study found.

WHO and UNICEF recommend that babies be fed nothing but breast milk for their first six months, after which they should continue breastfeed­ing — as well as eating other nutritious and safe foods — until at least two years old.

“The aggressive marketing of breast-milk substitute­s, especially through health profession­als that parents trust for nutrition and health advice, is a major barrier to improving newborn and child health worldwide,” said Dr Francesco Branca, Director of WHO’s Department of Nutrition and Food Safety.

“Health care systems must act to boost parent’s confidence in breastfeed­ing without industry influence so that children don’t miss out on its lifesaving benefits.” — www.who.int

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