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  • Breastfeeding in emergencies

    (PDF of this document is avail from me; contact me by pm if you'd like it. Link to a web version is coming shortly.
    -hornblower )




    Protecting infants in emergencies:

    Information for the Media

    "Although Sri Lanka is a country with a high exclusive breastfeeding rate, there was a myth among mothers about the inability to produce enough breastmilk when under stress. A major problem was the distribution of infant formula and feeding bottles by donors and non-governmental organisations
    (NGOs), without the appropriate controls, to breastfeeding mothers. Donors acted emotionally without any scientific basis, disregarding the dangers of artificial feeding in disasters. Additionally the mass media was very keen on feeding babies so made a public appeal to supply artificial milk and feeding
    bottles. The Ministry of Health faced many challenges to ensure that breastfeeding mothers continued to do so and did not swap to unsustainable and potentially dangerous infant formula."
    Statement from the Sri Lankan Ministry of Health after the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami


    Natural and man-made disasters ? earthquakes, floods, droughts and wars ? regularly put lives at risk. And babies caught in the ensuing chaos are vulnerable to malnutrition and death. Journalists have an important role in helping to protect infants in emergencies by not supporting appeals for donations of infant formula and by reminding audiences that breastmilk is a reliable and sterile food that helps to prevent illness, while artificial feeding
    may further add to the health risks.

    Why are infants vulnerable?
    Babies have specific nutritional needs and are born with an undeveloped immune system. For infants who are breastfed, breastmilk provides both food and immune support, which protects them from the worst of emergency conditions. However, the situation is very different for babies who are not breastfed. In an emergency, food supplies are disrupted, there may be no
    clean water with which to make up infant formula or to clean feeding implements and the health care system is stretched past breaking point. This means that babies who are not breastfed are vulnerable to infection and to developing diarrhoea. Babies with diarrhoea easily become malnourished and dehydrated and so are at real risk of death.

    Whenever there is an emergency, it is extremely important that babies who are already being breastfed continue to be and that babies who are not breastfed re-start breastfeeding or, if this is not possible, are given infant formula in the safest possible way.

    What about young children?
    It is not only babies that are vulnerable. Under five year olds, and especially children under 2 years, are at risk of increased illness and death in emergencies. Breastfeeding still protects these children and the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends that breastfeeding be continued until at least 2 years of age. Young children also need enough nourishing food that
    is safely prepared ? this too can be a real challenge in an emergency.

    What is the problem?
    Past experience has shown that when there is an emergency, massive amounts of infant formula and powdered milk are commonly donated. Some donations are a direct result of media appeals for infant formula. These may originate with aid agencies, governments or from individual efforts to help.

    Media coverage may generate public pressure on governments
    to bring in formula. In the confusion that surrounds emergencies, these products are often distributed in an uncontrolled way and used by mothers who would otherwise breastfeed their babies. This results in unnecessary illness and death for many infants. For instance, a UNICEF audit after the 2006 Yogyakarta earthquake in Indonesia found that although breastfeeding
    rates were initially very high, 70% of children under six months had been given donated infant formula. In another example, a Centre for Disease Classification (CDC) investigation of the post-flood deaths of more than 500 children in Botswana in 2005-06, found that nearly all of the babies who died were formula fed. Here the risk of hospitalisation for babies who were not breastfed was 50 times greater than that of breastfed infants. It is also extremely common for powdered milk to be distributed as a part of general rations. However, this is also problematic since experience has shown that about half of such milk will be given to babies.

    How can journalists help?
    The media has an important role to play in protecting babies in emergency situations by disseminating information that will protect breastfeeding and promote the appropriate use of infant formula and powdered milk.

    Members of the media can assist by including the following messages in their stories:

    ? Supporting mothers to continue breastfeeding is the surest way of protecting infants in emergencies.

    ? Breastfeeding is not fragile and women who are physically and emotionally stressed are able to make enough milk for their babies.

    ? The indiscriminate use of infant formula in an emergency is extremely dangerous to babies, causing illness and death.

    ? Emergency workers do not need large amounts of infant formula when there is an emergency and any that they do need should be procured locally. There is no need for donations of infant formula, powdered milk or baby bottles to be sent to the site of an emergency.

    ? Members of the public who donate funds to aid agencies should be encouraged to ask the recipients of their donations if and how they are distributing infant formula or powdered milk and encourage them to act appropriately.

    ? Members of the public who become aware of aid agencies distributing infant formula or powdered milk inappropriately should report these activities to the relevant authorities (see key contacts).

    Sometimes representatives of aid or government agencies will seek to place an appeal for donations of infant formula via the media. This is never appropriate. Such representatives should be directed to UNICEF
    for clarification on how to appropriately source and supply infant formula.

    How can babies and young children be protected in emergencies?
    There are accepted guidelines for the management of infant feeding in emergencies.

    1. Mothers who are breastfeeding their babies are to be given support and practical assistance to continue, they should never be indiscriminately given infant formula or powdered milk. Experience has found that peer support programmes can help mothers to care for their babies and keep breastfeeding.

    2. Mothers who have stopped breastfeeding completely, i.e. weaned their babies, should be encouraged to restart breastfeeding (relactate) and the option of wet nursing (where another woman breastfeeds the baby) should be explored for babies without mothers.

    3. If there are infants who cannot be breastfed they should be provided with infant formula and the associated necessary resources to prepare it, under close supervision. Carers should be provided with education and support and the health of the baby monitored. Baby bottles should never be used because
    of the risk of contamination due to the difficulty of effectively cleaning them ? even young babies can be fed via cup or spoon.

    4. If powdered milk is to be provided it should be mixed with the local staple cereal prior to distribution so that it cannot be used as a breastmilk substitute.

    5. Efforts to protect and support breastfeeding and ensure safe artificial feeding should extend to all young children.

    6. Emergencies may be used by infant formula manufacturers as a way to enter new markets and increase sales. Unethical marketing of infant formula is a problem worldwide and an international code has been developed to protect mothers and babies from such unethical marketing.

    Conclusion
    The messages that the media present about the needs of infants in emergencies can have a far-reaching impact on the babies who are unfortunate enough to be affected by an emergency. Members of the public, NGOs and donor agencies want to assist babies and giving them good information about infant and young child feeding in emergencies will help to prevent harmful practices and help to protect the most vulnerable from malnutrition and death.

    This briefing was prepared by the IFE Core Group, an international
    collaboration of UN agencies and NGOs developing policy guidance and
    capacity building on IFE
    Kenya
    Lebanon
    Central America
    M Arana/IBFAN LAC, 2006 A Maclaine/SCUK, Lebanon 2006 Lung?aho/CARE USA, 2006

  • #2
    Re: Breastfeeding in emergencies



    International Lactation Consultant Association

    Position Statement on Infant Feeding in Emergencies

    Increasingly over the last several years, mothers and infants have been
    affected by a variety of emergency situations world-wide

    ? Armed conflicts displace millions of families and cut them off from
    their usual food supplies. There are some 50 million refugees
    around the word. Eighty percent of them are women and children.

    ? Natural disasters also create short or long-term refugees and make
    access to food very difficult for sufficient time to endanger the most
    vulnerable of those affected - the ill, the elderly and young children.
    Crop failures, earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, tidal waves, typhoons
    and volcanic eruptions can destroy a country?s infrastructure and the
    livelihoods of those who weren?t killed outright.

    ? In many cases the immediate problem of securing food is complicated
    by outbreaks of illnesses such as cholera, diphtheria and
    malaria following disruption of power, water and sewage services.

    In all of these situations, breastfeeding is the safest, often the ONLY
    reliable choice for infants and small children. Not infrequently, it is
    life-saving. Yet misinformation, both among those families affected
    and among the staffs of humanitarian aid agencies often minimizes
    the importance of breastfeeding for babies in emergencies and allows
    infant formula donations to dominate the appeals for help. However
    well-meaning, this compromises both the immediate and long-term
    health of the children affected.

    Keeping in mind the critical importance of adequate nutrition and
    immunological protection to the health and survival of infants and
    young children and the valuable contribution breastfeeding makes to
    the mother?s long-term health as well, ILCA recommends that:

    1. all breastfed infants in emergency situations continue to be
    breastfed exclusively for six months and, when safe complementary
    foods are not available, beyond that point.

    2. breastfeeding continue alongside complementary feeding well into
    the second year of life and beyond whenever possible.

    3. humanitarian aid agencies adopt as part of their policy the
    promotion and support of breastfeeding in emergency situations.
    Training humanitarian aid workers to implement these policies is
    vital as many of them come from non-breastfeeding cultures where
    basic breastfeeding information and skills are lacking.

    4. training of all humanitarian aid workers include essential
    breastfeeding messages:

    - Nearly every woman can breastfeed her baby (babies) ?
    Mother?s milk alone has everything a baby needs to grow well
    in the first six months of life. Breastfeeding is protective
    against infectious diseases, especially diarrhea and acute
    respiratory infections (ARI).
    Even malnourished and
    traumatized mothers produce adequate quantities of good
    quality milk. The hormones released by the mother in the
    course of breastfeeding help the mother relax and counteract
    some of the results of stress.

    - Feeding the breastfeeding mother is a cost-effective way of
    ensuring adequate nutrition for both mother and baby
    (Donations of breast-milk substitutes which inappropriately
    target children during the breastfeeding period, may instead be
    used in powdered form as a protein enricher in cereals for
    babies over six months or to make nutritious hot drinks for
    mothers and older children)

    - When breastfeeding has been stopped prematurely or has not
    gotten started, re-lactation is possible with adequate support
    and appropriate breastfeeding management. Inducing lactation
    in women willing to breastfeed orphaned infants may also be
    an appropriate strategy. The baby may need supplementary
    feeding during the transition and families of re-lactating
    mothers may need help to help the mothers - especially in
    cultures in which breastfeeding is not widespread.

    5. at least one member of each humanitarian team have sufficient
    breastfeeding management skills to help mothers:
    - position and attach their babies to the breast effectively
    - inform both mothers and aid workers of the importance of:
    keeping mothers and babies together, frequent ( on average 8-
    12 x in 24 hours) breastfeeding, co-sleeping and breastfeeding
    at night, exclusive breastfeeding (no supplements, not even
    water, tea or breast-milk substitutes) for six months, avoiding
    the use of artificial teats, dummies and nipple shields.
    - teach them how to express their milk and feed by cup should
    the baby be unable to suckle
    - teach mothers to introduce others liquids in the second half of
    the first year with a cup rather than a bottle, while continuing
    breastfeeding

    6. at least one member of each regional humanitarian team have a high
    level of lactation management and counselling competency and offer
    both on-site assessments of non-routine breastfeeding situations
    and on-going training to upgrade local staff skills. These specialists
    may be lactation consultants IBCLC or other health-care professionals
    with advanced training in lactation and counselling.

    7. international and humanitarian aid agencies implement their policies
    (or develop them in cases where they do not yet have them) to
    exclude improper donations of breast-milk substitutes and equipment
    for bottle-feeding, to ensure that any necessary breast-milk
    substitutes be supplied in quantities sufficient to feed the recipient
    babies as long as they need them, that these breast-milk substitutes
    carry generic (non-brand-name) labels and be made available only
    to those families in which it is documented that there is no possibility
    for the infants to be breastfed or, during relactation and induced
    lactation while supplementation is still necessary.

    8. breastfeeding be integrated in national emergency plans in all
    countries {including industrialized countries in which breastfeeding
    may not yet have become the norm}

    9. public relations and media policies at local, regional, national and
    international levels emphasize breastfeeding as a vital component
    in infant health and survival programs during emergencies. There
    should be a mechanism for quick reaction when media reports
    imply that emergencies compromise a mother?s ability to
    breastfeed her baby.

    10.donors should be helped to ensure that their donations adhere to
    the terms of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk
    Substitutes and subsequent WHA resolutions.

    Many 20th Century disasters - both natural and man-made - will
    continue to have a devastating effect on the economies and wellbeing
    of the countries where they have occurred well into the 21st
    Century. Protecting, promoting and supporting breastfeeding in these
    areas will help ensure that those infants affected by these disasters
    will not be twice-victimised by long-term health and developmental
    problems that could be prevented by breastfeeding. For their
    mothers, too, there are health benefits to breastfeeding and, not
    insignificantly, breastfeeding has economic advantages which reduce
    the over-all cost of the disaster to both families and the nations
    affected. It is an investment that pays benefits many times over.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Breastfeeding in emergencies

      Hornblower,

      Can you comment or provide information on relactation or induced lactation for those currently non-lactating women with infants who may wish to prepare an alternative source of infant nutrition in case of an interrupted or contaminated water supply in the fall/winter?
      Separate the wheat from the chaff

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Breastfeeding in emergencies

        regarding relactation & induced lactation:

        Anecdotally all you need is breasts, a pituitary gland & a way to stimulate the breasts and nipples (ie a baby, a pump, effecive hand expression technique) There are reports of women who have brought in a milk supply with just those. In an emergency, this is probably the situation moms would be facing.


        However, for a more certain result, induced & relactation protocols using hormones and medicines + herbs have been developed.

        Dr. Jack Newman's protocols are probably the best known as he's done a lot of work in this area. Essentially we'd use hormones to simulate some of the conditions of pregnancy & then medications + herbs which are galactogogues.

        What you need to know about using the protocols to establish lactation:
        -women need not have been ever pregnant
        -they do not have ever breastfed
        -they can be post-menopausal
        -they just need nipples & a functioning pituitary gland

        Most commonly used galactogogue drug: domperidone (Rx rq'd). Less commonly used: reglan (Rx rq'd).

        Most commonly used herbal galactogues: goat's rue; fenugreek; blessed thistle.


        Resources:

        slides from Dr. Newman's presentation on this subject.

        All the protocols are outlined there.

        NB the reports of women who relactated or induced lactation for children (young AND adult), and other family members who were suffering from cancer or other diseases. Live human breastmilk contains interferon & other important immune mediating factors.


        The basics of inducing lactation & breastfeeding an adopted baby:



        Breastfeeding an adopted baby:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Breastfeeding in emergencies

          Thanks!
          Separate the wheat from the chaff

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Breastfeeding in emergencies

            Originally posted by hornblower View Post
            regarding relactation & induced lactation:

            Anecdotally all you need is breasts, a pituitary gland & a way to stimulate the breasts and nipples (ie a baby, a pump, effecive hand expression technique) There are reports of women who have brought in a milk supply with just those. In an emergency, this is probably the situation moms would be facing.
            Had to giggle at this. I started lactating again when a friend with a new baby came to visit about six months after I had weaned one of mine. No hand expression, no pump, no drugs, just a crying baby.

            I'm very glad to see your posts on this subject, and intend to print them to add to my medical notebook. I was not aware that a post-menopausal woman could produce milk again, very important information.

            Comment

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