NGO Backs Worldwide Push For Breastfeeding
NGO Backs Worldwide Push For Breastfeeding To Six Months
And Longer.
La Leche League New Zealand is backing an international educational campaign to see breastfed babies stay off solid foods until six months of age.
High and rising rates of obesity, diabetes and breast cancer are now partially attributed to starting solid foods too early and children not breastfeeding long enough.
Many New Zealand women are shocked that they have not been informed of the possible long-term consequences of starting solids too soon or weaning earlier than officially recommended by the World Health Organisation which says that babies should only have their mother’s milk for the first six months of life and continue breastfeeding with appropriate solids to two years or beyond.
Dr Alison Barrett, Obstetrician and member of La Leche League New Zealand’s Board of Consultants says, "The evidence that breastfeeding confers lifelong and dose related benefits to women and their children is so compelling, it could be considered negligent of doctors to not make parents aware of this. The time has come for doctors to stop worrying about making women feel guilty about not breastfeeding. As an obstetrician, I know that all mothers want the best for their babies. The information that 2 years of breastfeeding- at least- is not only normal, but in a child's best interests, needs to get out there, to both health professionals and parents alike."
La Leche League supports
Six months exclusive breastfeeding Introduction of nutritious foods after six months Continuing breastfeeding while feeding solid foods to two years or older
‘We help pregnant women and new
mothers learn about breastfeeding pretty much every day of
the year’ says Brylin Highton, La Leche League Leader in
Dunedin for many years. ‘But this week, our efforts are
aimed at getting the message out to the wider community that
the more you breastfeed, the more you and your baby
benefit’.