Shanghai Daily

Mom’s blog brings breastfeed­ing back to Serbia

- Katarina Subasic

When Branka Stamenkovi­c gave birth to her first child in Serbia, the experience was traumatic.

Minutes after the baby was born, nurses bundled up the infant and whisked him away, separating the mother and child for three days.

When they returned, the nurses gave Stamenkovi­c a cursory lesson in breastfeed­ing and sent the pair on their way.

Upset, overwhelme­d and in pain, Stamenkovi­c detailed her experience in a blog in 2008 that triggered an outpouring of similar stories from women across Serbia.

It also unwittingl­y lit the spark for a UNICEF campaign that has turned the Balkan country into a leading example of how to boost early breastfeed­ing rates.

“I used to write the blogs and cry,” said Stamenkovi­c, recalling the horror stories that women sent her, including how nurses yelled, humiliated or ignored them, and failed to provide guidance on basics like breastfeed­ing.

“I published over 700 stories online, and this is how UNICEF actually learned about the sad state of affairs of the babyfriend­ly program in Serbia.”

The UN children’s agency had first launched its “baby-friendly hospital initiative” in Serbia in the 1990s.

But after it handed the program over to the government in the early 2000s, breastfeed­ing rates fell off a cliff, plummeting to 8 percent in 2010.

The UN agency pointed to the stories on Stamenkovi­c’s blog to make a case for re-booting the initiative.

By 2014, the percentage of women breastfeed­ing within the first hour after birth was back up to 51 percent — a leap unseen among other middle and low-income countries.

The World Health Organizati­on and UNICEF have long pushed for mothers to exclusivel­y breastfeed babies during their first six months of life, starting within the first hour after birth.

Breast milk produced during those early days is especially rich in nutrients and antibodies, boosting infants’ chances of survival by protecting them from infections.

But health experts must battle a multi-billion dollar baby formula industry, dominated by American firms, that aggressive­ly advertises breast milk substitute­s to mothers from day one.

Global debate over the issue was revived last month when a US delegation reportedly tried to water down a WHO resolution that called for the promotion of breastfeed­ing.

US President Donald Trump added fuel to the fire when he came out in defence of formula, drawing criticism from health experts.

The early form of breast milk, known as colostrum, “is the best food that a human being can ever get,” said Djurdjica Cecez, a neonatolog­ist at Belgrade’s Narodni Front maternity hospital. It is “precious and irreplacea­ble,” she added.

One of her patients, 31-yearold Aleksandra Milenkovic, experience­d two different approaches first-hand.

Two years ago she was separated from her baby boy immediatel­y after giving birth.

He was brought back to her the following morning and was already being fed a formula diet.

Last week, at the same hospital, she delivered a baby girl and began breastfeed­ing immediatel­y.

“I had the fantastic opportunit­y to be with this baby and have it touch with me, skin to skin. We spent an hour like that and the baby was breastfed for the first time, which was wonderful,” Milenkovic said with a smile, lying down next to her 24-hour-old infant, fast asleep.

“I think that is the most beautiful thing that could happen.”

Cecez, her doctor, noted that Serbia has made impressive gains in promoting early breastfeed­ing in recent years.

Today, in order to be accredited, Serbian maternity hospitals must meet the “baby-friendly” guidelines that promote immediate skin-to-skin contact between mother and child after birth, breastfeed­ing within the first hour and support to keep up the practice.

But Cecez stressed that much more work needed to be done to improve maternity care in the country, from increasing hospital staff to improving the education of both health workers and future mothers.

While breastfeed­ing rates in the first hour after birth have skyrockete­d in Serbia, the figures fall off significan­tly in the following six months.

According to UNICEF, only 12 percent of mothers in Serbia exclusivel­y breastfeed their children for that period of time.

Breastfeed­ing can be “a very painful thing sometimes,” said Stamenkovi­c, recalling the lack of guidance she received at the time.

“You need somebody to provide an emotional support, to cheer you up and say, ‘yes you can do it.’ ”

The blogger, who has since become a politician, could never have predicted that her online efforts would have such an impact and says she is “glad” to have contribute­d to the change.

“But we have a long way to go yet,” she added.

 ??  ?? Aleksandra Milenovic watches her 24-hour-old baby Milica after breastfeed­ing her at the obstetrics and gynecologi­cal clinic “Narodni Front” in Belgrade, Serbia. — AFP
Aleksandra Milenovic watches her 24-hour-old baby Milica after breastfeed­ing her at the obstetrics and gynecologi­cal clinic “Narodni Front” in Belgrade, Serbia. — AFP

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