US mums need breast feeding education - study 
Reuters | Saturday, 13 January 2007

NEW YORK: A growing number of Americans incorrectly believe that infant
formula is as good as breast milk, while more are becoming increasingly
uncomfortable with mothers breast-feeding their infants in public, a survey
has found. 


"The findings underscore the need to educate the general public that
breast-feeding is the best method of feeding and nurturing infants," Dr Rowe
Li and colleagues from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in
Atlanta wrote in the January issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic
Association. 

Li and her team noted that while health experts recommend infants be breast
fed for at least a year, and receive breast milk alone until they reach six
months of age, the percentage of US infants exclusively breast fed at six
months is 14 per cent, while just 18 per cent continue to receive breast
milk at 12 months of age. The same survey, conducted in 2004, found 71 per
cent of children had ever been breast fed. 

To investigate public attitudes toward breast-feeding, which play a key role
in whether a woman decides to initiate and persist with breast-feeding, Li
and her team compared results from two nationwide surveys conducted in 1999
and 2003 by the public relations firm Porter Novelli. 

In 1999, 14.3 per cent of those surveyed agreed that "infant formula is as
good as breast milk," compared to 25.7 per cent in 2003, the researchers
found. 

And there was a small increase in the percentage of people who agreed with
the statement that "mothers who breast-feed should do so in private places
only," from 34.8 per cent to 37 per cent. The percentage who said they were
comfortable being near a mother breast-feeding her infant in public fell
from 49.9 per cent to 48.1 per cent. 

While rates of breast-feeding among US mothers have been on the rise since
1990, Li and her team note the percentage of women who started
breast-feeding fell for the first time between 2002 and 2003, from about 70
per cent to 66 per cent. 

"The findings imply that despite widespread information on the benefits of
breast-feeding, the trend in national opinion might be that infant formula
is as good as breast milk," Li and her colleagues state. 

This may at least in part be due to the introduction of formulas that
contain long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids in 2002, the researchers
note, which have been advertised as "mimicking the positive influence of
breast milk" on brain and vision development. Also, the researchers note,
spending on advertising for infant formula rose from $US29 million ($NZ42.77
million) in 1999 to $US46 million in 2004. 

SOURCE: Journal of the American Dietetic Association, January 2007.

 

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