Here’s why you should breastfeed your baby!
Nahnyong says her brother’s wife
thought her in-laws either hated her or were jealous of her because she had
enough money to buy milk for her new born baby and prevent her breast from ‘falling’.
“As educated as she was, she snubbed
all the advice to breastfeed her kids for at least six months, but when she
bore her third child, the breasts she risked her children’s life for, still
shrank.” Nahnyong says, adding that "even our grandmothers have always known the
importance of breast milk, I don’t know what is happening to this new
generation of girls”.
While women like Nahnyong’s sister
in-law have diverse erroneous justifications for not breastfeeding their
children, other women in some communities in Northern Cameroon are obliged to
delay breast feeding for their newborns because of cultural beliefs.
Woman breastfeeds her son in Cameroon's North region,2016
In the Bibemi community, it was
believed that the first breast milk flow after delivery should be collected and
thrown away. It was believed to be poisonous, until a UNICEF campaign in the area
led to a change in the mentality of the people.
Despite efforts by UNICEF and
other non-governmental organisations to sensitize women worldwide on the
importance of breastfeeding babies within an hour of birth, statistics indicate
that globally, some 77million newborns are not breast fed within this period.
A July 29 press release from
UNICEF says when children deprived of breastmilk within this period are denied
essential nutrients, antibodies and skin-to-skin contact with their mother that
protects them from disease and death.
Baby’s first
vaccine
“Breastmilk is a baby’s first vaccine, the
first and best protection they have against illness and disease,” France Bégin,
UNICEF Senior Nutrition Adviser said in a statement. “With newborns accounting
for nearly half of all deaths of children under five, early breastfeeding can
make the difference between life and death.”
North Region:UNICEF agents sensitize nursing mothers on nutrition
“Making babies wait too long for the first
critical contact with their mother outside the womb decreases the newborn’s
chances of survival, limits milk supply and reduces the chances of exclusive
breastfeeding,” Bégin said.
The longer breastfeeding is delayed, the higher the risk of death
in the first month of life. Delaying breastfeeding by 2-23 hours after birth
increases the risk of dying in the first 28 days of life by 40 per cent.
Delaying it by 24 hours or more increases that risk to 80 per cent.
“If all babies are fed nothing but
breastmilk from the moment they are born until they are six months old, over
800,000 lives would be saved every year.”
UNICEF analyses show that women are not getting the help they need
to start breastfeeding immediately after birth even when a doctor, nurse of
midwife is assisting their delivery.
Going by the UNICEF press release, in sub-Saharan Africa, for
example, where under five mortality rates are the highest worldwide, early
breastfeeding rates increased by just 10 percentage points since 2000 in East
and Southern Africa but have remained unchanged in West and Central Africa.
The same analyses also indicate that in the Middle East, North
Africa and in South Asia, for example, women who deliver with a skilled birth
attendant are less likely to initiate breastfeeding in the first hour of life,
compared to women who deliver with unskilled attendants or relatives.
Feeding babies other liquids or foods is another reason early
breastfeeding is delayed. In many countries, it is customary to feed a baby infant formula, cow’s milk or sugar water in the first
three days of life, UNICEF says. Almost half of all newborns are fed these
liquids. When babies are given less nutritious alternatives to breastmilk, they
breastfeed less often, making it harder for mothers to start and continue
breastfeeding.
Findings also show only 43 per
cent of infants under six months old are exclusively breastfed globally. Babies who are not breastfed at all
are 14 times more likely to die than those who are fed only breastmilk.
But any amount of breastmilk reduces a child’s risk of death.
Babies who received no breastmilk at all are seven times more likely to die
from infections than those who received at least some breastmilk in their first
six months of life.
Several activities are underway in various parts of Cameroon
in commemoration of the World Breastfeeding Week celebrated every year from August1
to 7.
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