Breastfeeding

Breastfeeding Equality for a Healthier World

The decision to breastfeed is one that is very intimate and personal. While the practice has both physical and psychological benefits for both mothers and babies[1], there are factors that can stand in the way of a mother's ability to breastfeed exclusively.

Breastfeeding is the best source of food for infants, as the milk mothers produce contains nutrients and antibodies that help babies grow up healthy and strong. It's also the more economical choice, as the cost of formula feeding and bottles can be prohibitive to many low-income families. However, those same families are faced with the reality of jobs that may not offer paid leave for new mothers, or breaks when it's necessary to pump.

These practical differences, which are heavily influenced by socioeconomic factors, are referred to as breastfeeding inequality. As these statistics show, a lack of resources, education, and support can fundamentally disable a mother from being able to exclusively breastfeed her little one.

Here in the United States, the starkly varied breastfeeding rates between wealthy and disadvantaged areas is hard to ignore. With 93% of moms in California breastfeeding their babies compared to 57% in Louisiana, it's clear that the correlation between poverty and breastfeeding inequality is no coincidence.

It's a cause that's important to the World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action, an organization that acts in support and protection of nursing. Their World Breastfeeding Week campaign, which ties into the United Nations' goals for achieving sustainability, is focused on the promotion of breastfeeding as a contributor to sustainable eating practices.

Key to the UN's sustainability plan is the elimination of socioeconomic disparities, including those that may keep mothers from breastfeeding. Factors like poverty, hunger, poor health, gender inequality, and a lack of quality schools and employment are all relative to the issue of breastfeeding inequality.

It's also crucial that the conversation around the choice to breast or bottle feed shifts tone from one of shame to one in support of the right to breastfeed. Rather than point fingers, the most productive act is one that shares awareness of this important issue and works toward a world where all mothers have the opportunity to breastfeed if they choose

Neve Spicer
Founder & Director
WeTheParents.org

World Breastfeeding Week Brings the Biased Pseudoscientists Out in Droves

World Breastfeeding Week Brings the Biased Pseudoscientists Out in Droves

World Breastfeeding Week begins now. Expect a flood of pseudoscientific articles about vitamin K and other things with a back door message about the “dangers of exclusive breastfeeding.” These writers are not only not scientists, they are ignorant about breastfeeding, infant nutrition, vitamin K options and infant nutrition in general.

Look at the Baby, Not the Scale

Look at the Baby, Not the Scale

It sounds simple doesn’t it? Yet I have seen so many moms whose babies have looked healthy, nursed well, met developmental milestones one right after the other and have lost all confidence in breastfeeding due to someone telling them that their baby’s weight was not on the charts. This someone was looking at the scale and charts, rather than the baby.

Infant Cereal and Juice vs. Breastfeeding

Infant Cereal and Juice vs. Breastfeeding

Q. I am on WIC and my baby is almost 6 months and though not quite ready for food yet will be soon. I am wondering if it would even be worth picking up the Iron Fortified Infant Cereal I am allowed on her 6 months voucher? The vouchers provide both infant cereal and juice. I plan to get the juice and put it away for when she is older but what about the iron in the cereal? Would it deplete her iron she gets from breastmilk?