Human beings are mammals, characterized by milk-producing organs
in the female for nourishing the young. However, some mothers have
abandoned the natural way in favor of infant formula to feed their
newborns.
It is difficult for China to meet the national target of 85
percent breastfeeding by 2010, experts said.
"The country's breastfeeding rate is about 70 percent, with the
rural rate higher than that in the cities," Lai Jianqiang, a
researcher with the National Institute of Nutrition and Food
Safety, said.
In some big cities, the breastfeeding rate is less than 60
percent.
"China is taking further action to increase its breastfeeding
rate," Lai told China Daily yesterday in response to World
Breastfeeding Week which ends today
The country has banned the promotion of breast milk substitutes
in hospitals since the launch of the Regulation of Human Milk
Substitutes Distribution in 1995. The regulation also stipulates
that doctors must promote the advantages of breastfeeding.
The regulation is being amended. More detailed measures and new
standards will be introduced.
"The amendment will extend the exclusive breastfeeding period
from the first four months to the first six months after a baby is
born, adopting the latest scientific discoveries of WHO studies,"
Dai Yaohua, a senior researcher with the Beijing-based Capital
Institute of Paediatrics and a counselor with the World Health
Organization, said.
"But efforts to promote breastfeeding are lagging behind the
promotion of formula milk," Dai said.
"The society also needs to strengthen the caring and protection
system for mothers and encourage them to continue
breastfeeding."
WHO and UNICEF have launched a Global Strategy for Infant and
Young Child Feeding, recommending that children be breastfed
exclusively for the first six months of life, and then continue to
be breastfed with adequate complementary food for up to two years
or beyond.
However, Zhou Hua, 33, a mother of a 1-year-old child, quit
breastfeeding and switched to infant formula when her daughter was
only one-month old.
"I was worrying about my job and wanted to get back to work
earlier," Zhou said. She is a hotel manager in Beijing.
"My daughter is healthy and is even a bit fatter than others of
her age, which has convinced me of the nutrition in formula milk,"
Zhou said.
However, fatter might not mean stronger, medical experts
said.
"Breast milk is a necessary and ideal food for a baby because
its nutrients are most suitable for the baby's digestion and
nourishment," Li Haimiao, a doctor from Beijing Haidian Maternal
and Child Healthcare Hospital, said.
"For mothers, breastfeeding is beneficial to post-partum
recuperation.
"Normally we let babies experience skin-to-skin contact with
their mothers and begin breastfeeding within the first hour of
life, which is quite important to the physical and mental health of
both mother and baby," Li said.
Peng Qiang, 30, an engineer in Zhuozhou of Hebei Province,
admitted that he knows little about breastfeeding.
"It is women's thing, totally beyond my understanding, the
recently married Peng said.
But a caring husband and supportive family can really make a
difference.
Zhang Jian, a father of a seven-year-old girl is proud of his
wife who continued to breastfeed for more than two years.
"I cooked nutritious meals, such as fish soup, for my wife every
day to help her continue breastfeeding," Zhang said. "As a result,
my daughter is very healthy and seldom falls ill."
(China Daily August 7, 2007)