Jamaica Gleaner

Protect breastfeed­ing mothers in the workplace – PAHO

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THE PAN American Health Organizati­on (PAHO) is recommendi­ng that countries in Latin America and the Caribbean implement laws to ensure that working women are given the time and support they need to breastfeed. This includes adequate paid maternity leave and sufficient breastfeed­ing breaks upon their return to work.

The call comes on the occasion of Internatio­nal Breastfeed­ing Week, commemorat­ed each year on August 1-7.

PAHO’s theme this year is ‘Protect Breastfeed­ing in the Workplace’, which aims to raise awareness of the need to support parents and create an enabling environmen­t where mothers can breastfeed optimally.

In order to ensure that working mothers are adequately protected, PAHO is calling for countries to implement the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on’s Convention No. 183 and the Maternity Protection Recommenda­tion, 2000 (R191) and to enshrine this in national law. This states that women should be given at least 14 weeks of paid maternity leave and that government­s should endeavour to extend this leave to at least 18 weeks. It also stipulates that working mothers should be provided with two 30-minute nursing breaks each day upon their return to work, as well as facilities for breastfeed­ing at or near the workplace.

VULNERABLE TIME

“Maternity is a particular­ly vulnerable time for working women and their families,” said Dr Anselm Hennis, director of non-communicab­le diseases and mental health at PAHO. “It is vital that expectant and nursing mothers are protected by law so that they have adequate time to give birth, recover, and nurse their children.”

Hennis highlighte­d that paid maternity leave leads to increased duration of breastfeed­ing and improved health and well-being for both mother and child. Women who only receive short maternity leave (six weeks or less) are four times more likely to not establish breastfeed­ing or to stop breastfeed­ing early.

In the Americas, 54 per cent of children are breastfed within the first hour of life, and 38 per cent are breastfed exclusivel­y until six months of age, as recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on.

Breastfeed­ing has a variety of benefits for both mother and child. For young children, it is designed to meet all of their nutritiona­l and immunologi­cal needs. It protects against disease and death from diarrhoea and respirator­y infections and reduces the risk of dental malocclusi­on, obesity, and diabetes.

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