Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Flashy marketing deceives new mothers

- By W. Gifford-jones M.D. and Diana Gifford-jones

The global formula milk industry is huge and growing rapidly, at about US$55 billion and projected to reach US$110B by

2026. Aggressive and deceptive marketing by manufactur­ers is driving this growth. The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) is ringing alarms. It charges the industry with using new digital marketing tactics to target pregnant women and new mothers with “personaliz­ed social media content that is often not recognizab­le as advertisin­g.”

The Internet and smart phones are wonderful tools. But they can also be dangerous. Women have breastfed babies since the beginning of time. Animals thrive without Big Pharma. Human babies do too.

The WHO says the digital onslaught by industry reaches 2.47 billion people. The intention is to plant concerns in the minds of new mothers that their natural breastmilk is insufficie­nt. They set out to convince new mothers that they’re nutritiona­lly uneducated and irresponsi­ble if they choose traditiona­l breast milk.

Dr. Francesco Branca, Director of the WHO Nutrition and Food Safety department, goes on the offence. He says, “The promotion of commercial milk formulas should have been terminated decades ago.” He adds, “That formula milk companies are now employing even more powerful and insidious marketing techniques to drive up their sales is inexcusabl­e and must be stopped.”

What are the natural benefits that breast milk has always given babies? For one, mother’s milk transfers antibodies to build immunity against infection.

Ameae Walker, Professor of Biomedical Science at UC Riverside School of Medicine, explains that copies of these cells will provide immunity to the baby for life. Breastfeed­ing protects mothers as well by reducing risk of breast and ovarian cancer, type 2 diabetes, and high blood pressure.

Apart from conveying immunity, extensive research shows that breastmilk offers increased long-term protection from a host of diseases. Breast-fed babies have less chance of developing ear, respirator­y, and urinary infections. They are more resilient against bacterial meningitis, a serious condition that can lead to death. Breastfeed­ing decreases the risk of obesity, type 1 and type 2 diabetes, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, high blood pressure and heart disease.

While antibodies in breastmilk adjust to a growing baby’s evolving needs, manufactur­ed formula is unchanging and has no antibodies. Instead, manufactur­ers add ingredient­s designed to foster good gut bacteria. This may help protect babies from illness, but not to the same degree.

It has also been found that vitamins and minerals added to manufactur­ed milk cause

increased gas in babies and more constipati­on. Bottle feeding affects mother-child bonding. And formula fed babies have an increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome.

Expectant mothers have reason for confidence, not trepidatio­n, in their abilities to breastfeed babies. At best, it should be deemed unethical to market misleading informatio­n about baby formula. At worst, given the lifelong health consequenc­es at stake, and the duty to care for society’s youngest and most vulnerable members, such marketing should be criminal.

There are, of course, circumstan­ces in which formula is the right choice. These mothers should be supported, not shamed. It’s an obvious fact that many babies raised

on formula have fared just fine. There are geniuses, concert pianists, gold-medal athletes, doctors, lawyers and every other profession­al among them.

But the economics of the formula milk industry is the problem. This industry should not be allowed to profit at the expense of parental confidence and children’s health – yet profit is precisely the boardroom mandate of these companies. Looked at another way, the total cost of formula feeding is estimated to be US$900-$3,000 per year. Those funds would be better spent other ways.

It’s the WHO’S boring reports versus deceptive digital marketing. Not a good match up.

(Advice provided in this column is only the opinion of the author and does not represent the views of this newspaper; for comments: info@docgiff.com.)

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