Monday, July 31, 2006

Local health counselors must counter cultural barriers to encourage breast-feeding (Lowell Sun Online)

Nursing's back, baby.

After a precipitous decline through the 1960s and 1970s, when less than a quarter of women chose to nurse -- the height of formula's fashion -- the CDC now estimates that just over 70 percent of babies are breast-fed at some point in their lives.

But while babies might be enjoying through-the-roof nursing rates, whether you're a white, Asian, black or Hispanic mom has a lot to do with whether you'll breast-feed, and for how long. Turns out that certain immigrant groups are much less likely to try it and continue.



click to read more...

World Breastfeeding Week to be celebrated on August 1-7 (MoroccoTimes.com)

The World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action (WABA) is celebrating the World Breastfeeding Week on August 1-7. The week commemorates the Innocenti Declaration, which was adopted in 1990 to promote and support breastfeeding.

click to read more...

Nursing in public: Moms who breastfeed try to be discreet, but sometimes ‘you’ve gotta do it’ (La Crosse Tribune)

A breastfeeding ad of a woman eating her lunch in a bathroom stall — using the toilet paper dispenser and tampon vending machine as makeshift tables — left a lasting impression on Amy Ramsay.

The New Albin, Iowa, mother recalls the image every time 7-month-old Gianna gets hungry when they are out and about.

“I usually look for a quiet place, somewhere not so conspicuous” to nurse Gianna, Ramsay said.

And since her comfort level has increased, the restroom is typically a last resort.


click to read more...

Breastfeeding Push Turns to Workplace Obstacles (Women's e news)

(WOMENSENEWS)--Carmen Letscher's maternity leave ends this week and she's anxious about going back to work.

Though she was able to breastfeed her daughter Lucy for three months, she's not confident that she will hit her goal of six months. The public relations company she works for has 500 employees, over three-quarters of whom are women, yet Letscher has never known anyone to breastfeed there. Her human resources department has found a spare office she can use as a makeshift lactation room. It's all hers; until they hire someone who needs the space.

"If I'm leaving my daughter in day care, I want to give her the best of everything, given the situation," Letscher said. "My goal is to breastfeed for another three months, but I'm apprehensive about my work schedule, finding a good place to pump and trying to pump discreetly. I can't feel bad if I don't make it to six months. If I have to supplement with formula, I'll have to be OK with it."

Letscher has reason to be apprehensive. Despite the well-known benefits of breastfeeding and a controversial breastfeeding campaign by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, breastfeeding time can be cut short by the challenges women face when they return to full-time work. The number of mothers who feel this push-pull continues to grow as the proportion of mothers in the work force increases.




click to read more...

Laid bare: The breastfeeding row (National Post)

At a time when flesh-baring fashions prevail, with scantily clad models and well-endowed movie stars spilling out of the pages of glossy magazines, the latest outcry over public indecency is being aimed at an unlikely target: A parenting magazine for new mothers, distributed free in doctors' offices and filled with earnest advice about babies.

A close-up image of a baby at breast may seem a logical choice to illustrate a story about breastfeeding, but it is stirring up controversy over the latest issue of babytalk magazine.

The picture, which has the profile of the baby as its focus and does not even have a hint of a nipple exposed, has fuelled the debate about breastfeeding in public, pitting those who call the magazine cover "gross" and "disgusting," against breastfeeding advocates who say society's squeamishness about such images underscores the need for an overhaul of public attitudes.



click to read more...

The Right To Breastfeed (WIFR)

It's pretty much a natural instinct. Your little ones are hungry so you feed them. But feeding time was interrupted for one mom who says she has the right to breastfeed. It's one of the best bonding experiences between a mother and their child. So Lacey Richardson was shocked when the connection between her and 6-month-old Olivia was interrupted.

Lacey Richardson was trying to breastfeed her baby at Magic Waters and says, "Someone came up to me and said ma’am, excuse me you need to cover up. I said no I don't I will when I'm done. I'm nursing my baby."

And she has the right to respond the way she did. Illinois has a law that makes it legal for women to nurse in public or private places. But workers at Magic Waters were unaware of the Right to Breastfeed Act.



click to read more...

Fair promotes benefits of breast-feeding (Battle Creek Enquirer)

World Breastfeeding Week begins Tuesday, and Battle Creek is bringing awareness to the effort for the second year.

World Breastfeeding Week is Aug. 1 to 7, when communities will host programs and other health fairs promoting breast-feeding.

In Battle Creek, several organizations have teamed up to host the second annual "all things related to breast-feeding and mothering fair."



click to read more...

Health departments to host breastfeeding classes this month (Jackson Sun)

Breastfeeding can reduce infant deaths, according to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the American Academy of Pediatrics. That's why the Tennessee Department of Health wants you to recognize World Breastfeeding Week, Tuesday through Aug. 7, which raises awareness about the importance of breastfeeding.

"Breast milk is still the best food for your baby's first year of life," said Glenda King, breastfeeding coordinator for the Tennessee Women, Infants and Children (WIC) program.

"Nearly all women are able to breast-feed when they receive consistent and accurate information and are supported by their health care providers, family and community," King said. "Hospitals, health providers, workplaces and communities can work together to protect breastfeeding by establishing a breastfeeding-friendly environment."

click to read more...

Sunday, July 30, 2006

More Social Acceptance Needed for Breastfeeding (Scoop: - New Zealand)

A return to an acceptance that breastfeeding is the normal way to feed babies is absolutely key to further increasing breastfeeding rates in New Zealand.

New Zealand College of Midwives spokeswoman, Norma Campbell says putting breastfeeding back on the pedestal it deserves is something society as a whole must promote.

“Understanding that breastfeeding is the normal and perfectly acceptable way to feed a baby for at least six months is something we all must need to work on as well as providing support for new mothers to do the very best they can with their breastfeeding,” she says.



click to read more...

Humphries touts breastfeeding benefits (The Palestine Herald)

Palestine — To promote the numerous benefits of breastfeeding, the Texas Department of State Health Services is joining forces with national and worldwide organizations in support of August as Breastfeeding Awareness Month.

Michelle Humphries, a Breastfeeding Peer Counselor for the Palestine and Athens WIC Clinics — and a mother of four — makes it a priority to teach women of those benefits year-round.

“I inform pregnant moms about the benefits of breastfeeding and help new moms get started in the process,” she said. “We have classes every Tuesday afternoon and have recently started a support group for nursing moms.”


click to read more...

Breastfeeding Rally (WCAX-TV)

Activists defended breastfeeding Saturday. A demonstration in Burlington was held after the City Council rejected a resolution to take an official stance in support of the practice. Vermont's Health Department and a breast-feeding support group hosted the rally and kicked off World Breastfeeding Week.


Activists say breastfeeding is not just an private bond between mothers and babies. They marched on Church Street Saturday to raise public awareness that's it's a community health issue, too. "Breastfeeding is a big public health issue. babies who are breast fed are getting the food that's meant for human babies," said Jan Campbell, with the Vermont Department of health.



click to read more...

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Mother's milk is the best (The Border Mail)

MUM’S milk is best and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise, says Wodonga Milk of Kindness.

Next week is World Breastfeeding Week and this year’s theme, Code Watch, looks at how the marketing of formulas has been a barrier to women breastfeeding.

Wodonga Milk of Kindness project worker Kim McKenna said people promoting breastfeeding were still trying to recover from marketing errors made 20 years ago.

“Marketers told women that formula was just as good as breast milk,” she said.

“Breast milk is naturally designed for the baby and cannot be replaced by any formula we synthesise.



click to read more...

More new mothers breastfeed their babies

The Department of Health's effort in promoting breast milk has produced fruitful results as surveys show a rising trend in the prevalence and duration of breastfeeding in Hong Kong.

The department's Senior Medical & Health Officer Dr Lo Yim-chong said the exclusive breastfeeding rate - the percentage of mothers who give their newborns breast milk only - rose to 12% in 2004 from 6% in 1997.

The rate of mothers who have ever breastfed also climbed, from 50% in 1997 to 69% in 2004. However, Dr Lo pointed out there is still room for an increase, considering the higher rates reported in some countries.

click to read more...

CRH encourages new mothers (The Culpeper Star Exponent)

Health experts encourage mothers to breastfeed their babies because of the health benefits it provides for both.

During the 2006 World Breastfeeding Week Aug. 1-7, local health educators will emphasize the importance of breastfeeding with signs and brochures posted throughout Culpeper Regional Hospital.


click to read more...

Friday, July 28, 2006

Magazine Cover Swells Breast-Feeding Controversy (KIROTV.com)

"I was SHOCKED to see a giant breast on the cover of your magazine," one person wrote.

"I immediately turned the magazine face down," wrote another.

"Gross," said a third.

Readers of a free parenting magazine weren't complaining about a sexually explicit cover, but rather one of a baby nursing. It's a sign that some Americans are squeamish over the sight of a nursing breast, even as breast-feeding itself gains greater support from the government and medical community.

Babytalk is a free magazine whose readership is overwhelmingly mothers of babies. Yet in a poll of more than 4,000 readers, one-quarter of responses to the cover were negative, calling the photo -- a baby and part of a woman's breast, in profile --inappropriate.

One mother who didn't like the cover explains she was concerned about her 13-year-old son seeing it.

"I shredded it," said Gayle Ash, of Belton, Texas, in a telephone interview. "A breast is a breast -- it's a sexual thing. He didn't need to see that."

click to read more...


Shredding a breast?!? This woman and all the others like her make me incredibly sad. Body shame is a terrible thing, even more so when it is passed on to the next generation. This woman is teaching her sons that the female body is disgusting and should be treated with violence and disdain. Now isn't that a wonderful lesson?

DOH-EV highlights importance of breastfeeding (PIA News Releases)

Tacloban City (28 July) -- The Department of Health - Eastern Visayas (DOH-EV) through its Regional Director Benita Pastor will spearhead various activities relative to the observance of World Breastfeeding Week and Mother-Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative Week on August 1-7. For this year's celebration, the theme is centered on "Da Milk Code: Don't Break the Code".



click to read more...

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

ML presents Breastfest 2006 (Columbia Basin Herald)

Annual event celebrates World Breastfeeding Week with vendors, guest speakers, raffles

MOSES LAKE -- People at the state level are talking about Moses Lake.

No, it's not the lake or nice weather they're buzzing about.

It's the city's Healthy Communities Project, one component of which is the Breastfeeding Coalition.


On Aug. 1, the annual Breastfest 2006 will take place in celebration of World Breastfeeding Week and local support for breastfeeding services.

Kimberly Radtke, coordinator of the Breastfeeding Coalition of Washington, is one of the guest speakers at this year's event.

Radtke intends to focus her presentation on "celebrating Moses Lake's accomplishment and the fabulous work this community has done," she said.

click to read more...

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Breastfeeding 'can save NHS millions' - (Britain - Times Online)

NEW mothers are to receive a personalised plan that aims to improve rates of breastfeeding by 50 per cent and save the NHS millions on the treatment of illness in babies.

Guidelines published today by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence sets out recommendations for the improvement of postnatal care of women and babies, including checks for newborns, mothering skills and women’s health issues.



click to read more...

Introducing Baby to Solid Foods Too Early Increases Risk of Allergic Diseases

Newswise — Feeding solid foods to infants before 6 months of age can increase the risk of allergies, while exclusive breastfeeding for at least 6 months may prevent the onset of allergic symptoms later in life, according to a paper published in the Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. The paper is the first consensus document published in a peer-reviewed journal to recommend allergy-avoiding strategies for introducing solid foods to the infant diet.



click to read more...

Lawyer, Wife Livid Over Breastfeeding Incident (Local10.com)

CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. -- A Deerfield Beach lawyer is on a letter-writing campaign after, he says, a restaurant employee asked his breastfeeding wife to "take it outside."

Geil Bilu said that he and his wife and children, ages 19 months and nine weeks, were at Westside Bagels in Coral Springs Saturday morning when his infant daughter began to fuss. Bilu said his wife began to discretely nurse the baby, when a man, who Bilu said he believes was a restaurant manager, came over and asked her to leave.

Bilu said when his wife told the man that she was nearly done feeding the baby and would leave as soon as she was done, the man stood by the table and stared until the family packed up and left.


click to read more...

PLEASE don't let H1782 die - support breastfeeding!!!

The clock is running out on Massachusett's H1782 - please don't let this bill die yet again!!

The bill is currently languishing in the steering committee, waiting to be scheduled for an appearance on the floor and a vote.

We only have until July 31st, so your phone calls are desperately needed.

Find your state reps by visiting http://www.mass.gov - on the lower left hand side, you'll see a drop-down menu for Local Government. Choose your community, then click on the link for State Legislators.

Call their offices. Tell them you are a constituent, that H1782 deserves and needs their support, and that you want this bill passed NOW.

Please don't let this bill die - we got it this far, let's see this fight through!!!

Please feel free to share this message anywhere you deem appropriate. :)

Monday, July 24, 2006

Vital that new mums are fed the right info (Scotsman.com)

IT'S the most natural, instinctive and intimate thing in the world: a mother, still glowing from the aftermath of labour, gently nursing her newborn.

Flick through the pregnancy manuals and mum-to-be magazines, and breastfeeding takes on a rosy, happy glow; engorgement is a mild irritation to be solved using a cabbage leaf and encouraging your baby to take their first feed is as easy as ABC.

After all, we all know what bits are supposed to go where... how hard can it be?



click to read more...

Circumcision, Breastfeeding, and Maternal Bonding

This index page contains links to documents about circumcision versus breastfeeding, the effect of circumcision on mother-infant bonding and interaction, and information about breastfeeding's beneficial effect on reducing the risk of urinary tract infection (UTI) in infancy.

click to view site...

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Nursing moms rebuffed at gyms (Sacbee.com)

On a blistering summer day, Jane Cerussi was discreetly nursing her fussy infant by the pool at an Elk Grove gym, when a manager asked her to move or cover up because other members had complained.
"I never expected something like this to happen in this day and age in Northern California," Cerussi said.



A similar incident recently at another California Family Fitness gym in Rocklin is calling attention to an often overlooked law protecting a mother's right to breast-feed in public.
Despite the law and studies showing the health benefits of the practice, advocates say what happened in Elk Grove and Rocklin reflects a society still unaccustomed to the sight of nursing mothers in public places.

Last week, the California Women's Law Center sent a letter to the locally owned California Family Fitness chain after the Rocklin woman was told she couldn't breast-feed where she could be seen by other members.

The employee had said breast-feeding in a public area was "offensive" to other gym members, and when the woman complained to a manager she was told that her actions were "disrespectful," according to the letter.

But under a California law enacted in 1997, women are allowed to breast-feed anywhere in public where they're entitled to be present.



click to read more...

Ban on milk substitute ads stands (INQ7.net)

THE absolute ban on the promotion and advertisement of breast milk substitutes will continue after the Supreme Court opted not to issue a restraining order on the implementation of the Milk Code.

Instead, the high court ordered Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, Health undersecretaries Dr. Ethelyn Nieto, Dr. Margarita Galon, Alexander Padilla and Dr. Jade F. Del Mundo to comment within 10 days on the petition filed by an international health lobby group seeking the nullification of the revised implementing rules and regulations (IRR) of Administrative Order 2006-0012 issued last May 16.

The assailed AO revised a 1986 law, Executive Order No. 51, or the Milk Code, which had been passed in the cooperation with the milk industry to regulate the use of breast milk substitutes.



click to read more...

Friday, July 21, 2006

Breast-feeding: Nutrition straight from the source (Columbian.com)

Well before I had my baby, I read all about breast-feeding. As the government wraps up a public-health campaign to encourage breast-feeding, still more research mounts on how much the practice benefits babies and mothers.

The latest: A study published this month in the journal Pediatrics indicates that breast-fed children later have lower bed-wetting rates. Other studies show that breast-feeding decreases the incidence of colds, infections, asthma, leukemia, lymphoma, obesity and diabetes. Breast-feeding is good for mothers, too. It burns an extra 500 calories a day to help shed pregnancy pounds, and lowers rates of ovarian and breast cancer, diabetes and osteoporosis.

When I pulled my squalling just-born infant to me for the first time, I quickly realized that knowing all that didn't help me much when it came to the actual practice of breast-feeding.



click to read more...

The Formula Follies - OpinionJournal (Wall Street Journal editorial page)

The Merchants of Death in Christopher Buckley's novel "Thank You for Smoking" are spokesmen for the most vilified industries in Washington: alcohol, tobacco and firearms. A lobbyist for baby formula may have to join them in a sequel. Proponents of breast-feeding, emboldened by studies that trumpet human milk's superiority to its supermarket substitutes, are abandoning platitudes like "Breast Is Best" in favor of aggressive campaigns designed to portray formula feeding as not merely inferior but dangerous.

A startling television ad in a government breast-feeding campaign likened feeding an infant formula to being thrown from a mechanical bull while heavily pregnant. Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin has proposed mandatory warning labels for formula cans. Breast-feeding advocates are pushing legislation to stop hospitals from giving free formula to new mothers. A new book calls formula feeding "deviant behavior" that should occur only as an "emergency nutrition intervention to prevent starvation and death." "There's not so much talk now about the benefits of breast-feeding," says Katy Lebbing of La Leche League International, "but the risks of not breast-feeding."



click to read more...

Council kills breast-feeding initiative (Burlington Free Press.com)

The City Council went on the record about breast-feeding at its last meeting on July 10. By a vote of 7 to 6, it decided the city should not encourage mothers to nurse their babies.


click to read more...

Help give women the right to breastfeed in public with the NCT (GMTV)

The National Childbirth Trust (NCT) is the largest and best-known charity in Europe for those becoming parents. It is the voice of parents on pregnancy, birth and the first few years of being a parent.

The charity provides a range of support services for parents at local level. Celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, the NCT has successfully campaigned for improved care during pregnancy and childbirth and for parents of new babies and promotes the principle of informed choice for women and their partners.

The NCT is now campaigning for a woman's right to breastfeed in public and wants you to get involved.

Women in England, Wales and Northern Ireland can still be asked to stop breastfeeding when in public or to breastfeed out of sight, even in the toilets, which is not acceptable. However, in Scotland it is an offence to stop mothers from feeding their babies in public places.



click to read more...

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Type 1 Moms Just as Capable of Breastfeeding as Healthy Moms (Diabetes Health magazine)

At intervals of five days after giving birth and then four months after giving birth, Danish researchers interviewed 102 women with type 1 about breastfeeding. The type 1 women’s breastfeeding habits were then compared to a large random sample from the general population of Danish women.



click to read more...

Bosom studies (Philadelphia Inquirer)

"BooBies," an art show on Fabric Row, has a particularly popular double-breasted focus.

"BooBies."

And Tim Bowen suspects that's just about all the information (and incentive) it will take to draw a crowd to his gallery, which opened in the spring on the stretch of Fourth Street south of South known as Fabric Row.

"The name makes the show possible," says Bowen, a painter and part-time indie-rock musician.

Breast is a bit too clinical, he says. And while a Web search easily turns up 200 or so other descriptors (not to mention pictures that, on second thought, should not be mentioned because they do not belong in an art gallery), most of those words are lurid, rude, insulting, disgusting ... you get the ... um, picture.

And none of those were Bowen's intentions. He got the idea for the show when he noticed that the most looked-at pictures in another recent exhibition at the gallery were the nudes.

"In fact, someone said to me that they liked the pictures of the boobies - and I realized what a great word that is."

click to read more...

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Breastfeeding 'kills baby's pain' (BBC NEWS)

Breastfeeding may be the ultimate natural painkiller for newborn babies.

A review of research found that breastfeeding newborns helps relieve the pain from a needle prick used to screen their blood for disease.

click to read more...

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Exercising the right to nurse (The Sun News)

Tamar Ben-Pazi isn't uncomfortable about breastfeeding her young son Silas in public.

The Myrtle Beach resident has tended to her son's needs in restaurants, at the mall, on the beach, on a public street and in museums.

"I've always felt it was very much my right to be in public," said the mother of 11-month-old Silas and 4-year-old daughter, Talia.

Although Ben-Pazi is confident about nursing in public, other mothers, especially new moms, may not be. The recent opening of a nursing moms' room at Dillard's at Coastal Grand Myrtle Beach mall reflects a trend in which public establishments are creating special places where mothers can breastfeed their children comfortably and privately. Such rooms are becoming more popular since the passage of an S.C. law in January that protects breastfeeding moms who choose to nurse in public.



click to reaad more...

You Can Breastfeed! (BabyTalk Magazine)

How to overcome the most common challenges
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Breastfeeding certainly proves the axiom "the best things in life are free." It's not always pain-free, guilt-free, or fancy-free, mind you. Ticking off a list of the most common breastfeeding difficulties can be alarming — just as hearing every detail of pregnancy, labor, and delivery can make you wonder why women agree to propagate the species in the first place.

But if you're aware of the possible breastfeeding pitfalls before you get lost in a postpartum fog, you can drastically lower the number of days filled with long crying jags (yours, not the baby's) and the number of times you swear like a sailor at your husband for not having breasts. Simply put, once you know what to expect, you've laid the groundwork for a successful breastfeeding experience — one that is rewarding, exhausting, magical, and, of course, free of charge.




click to read more...

Why Women Don't Nurse Longer (BabyTalk)

A Babytalk exclusive report on why breastfeeding can be controversial
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You've heard it by now: A mom should breastfeed her baby for at least the first year of life, as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics. Today, more new moms than ever try to nurse. In 2004, the most recent year for which government statistics are available, about 70 percent of U.S. mothers reported that they had tried breastfeeding, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That's up from 55 percent in 1993.

But then consider this: At 6 months, only 36 percent were still nursing. At 12 months, the number dips to 17 percent — fewer than one in five mothers. While moms know that breastfeeding gives babies the best start in life, legions of them find it difficult — if not downright impossible — to nurse longer than six months, let alone up to the one-year milestone.

Whether it's a baby who has trouble latching on, a work schedule that doesn't allow time for pumping, or a lack of support at home, the forces that conspire against women who want to breastfeed are far-reaching in their scope. Many moms who plan to nurse are caught off-guard by the challenges breastfeeding can present. In fact, according to a nationally representative Babytalk survey, 46 percent of moms said that breastfeeding required more time than they'd expected and 56 percent wished that they had been able to nurse longer than they did. Here's what's undermining women's efforts, and how you can get the support you need to keep going.



click to read more...

It's hard for me not to cringe as I link to an article on BabyTalk Magazine - they're usually just so, well, awful (across the board, not just on breastfeeding)! But I do think they deserve kudos for trying, and so I link....

Breast-Feeding Controversy: The Fight to Nourish in Public (ABC News)

July 18, 2006 — Although studies show that breast-feeding is healthy for both mother and child, 57 percent of the public are uncomfortable with public breast-feeding, according to Babytalk magazine.

The American Academy of Pediatrics suggests mothers feed their babies breast milk exclusively in their first six months.

Breast-feeding in public is not outlawed in any state; however, 42 states have laws that specifically protect a woman's right to breast-feed in public.



click to read more...

Monday, July 17, 2006

banthebags.org

Check out BanTheBags.org, home of the national campaign to stop hospital-based marketing of infant formula to new mothers!

banthebags.org

Sunday, July 16, 2006

Perfect food difficult for public to swallow (Independent Record)

Breast-feeding. That one single word has the power to spark heated public debate.

In 2004, an Iowa City woman was kicked out of a restaurant because she was nursing her baby. The owner, and then the owner’s wife, told her she was upsetting other customers and asked her to feed her baby in the restroom. She refused, so she and her family were then asked to leave.

As a nursing mother, I’d like to ask a question: Why couldn’t those customers who were so offended in that restaurant have turned their heads to look in a different direction?



click to read more...

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Vote (ABC News)

Good Morning America is going to be doing a piece on Tuesday about breastfeeding. They are currently running a poll on their website: "How Do You Feel About Public Breastfeeding?"

click to view site and vote

New Law Protects Breastfeeding Mothers (WBKO)

Susan Brown is a lactation consultant with the Barren River Area District Health Department. She says: "We've been waiting for this law for a long time. It didn't just happen overnight. We've known about it in the breastfeeding world for a long time and have been supporting it. We're really excited."

The excitement is all about Senate Bill 106. It explicitly permits mothers to breastfeed their baby or express their breast milk in public and prevents anyone from interfering with a mother breastfeeding in public.

Brown says: "What it means is that all breastfeeding moms in Kentucky now have no fear of breastfeeding in public. Before the law was a little bit fuzzy and a mom might be asked to leave a mall or restaurant, anywhere she might be breastfeeding her baby."



click to read more...

Should women be discreet when breast feeding? (Atlanta Journal Constitution)

Should women be discreet when breast feeding?

Diane Glass, a left-leaning columnist, writes the commentary this week and Shaunti Feldhahn, a right-leaning columnist, responds.

click to read more...

Friday, July 14, 2006

Love Bites (Eye Weekly)

"Over the years, I've had the opportunity to do research into the culture of breastfeeding and motherhood. Opinions are never middling: mothers are sexualized, then chided for expressing this themselves; they're desexualized then forced to live this role for other people's comfort; they're told there's nothing more natural than breastfeeding, but humiliated for doing it in public -- people fetishize breast milk, breastfeeding, breasts, breasts, breasts. Everyone seems to have an opinion, each polarizing the other and, as many breastfeeding mothers will tell you, even perfect strangers are not afraid to share.

"Dobkin is the first person I've come across looking at the complexities of breastfeeding by openly and creatively recognizing the sensual, ordinary and even comical nature of this act. In doing so, she challenges all opinions -- a totally fucking cool stand in the mother-as-untouchable debate. "

click to read more...

Nanny goat adopts and breastfeeds "disowned" lamb (Tabloid News)

Residents of Appiakwaa, a suburb of Saltpond in the Central Region have for the past three months savoured a rare spectacle of a sympathetic nanny goat that had adopted and breastfed a surviving lamb that its own mother had turned its back on.

Explaining the spectacle to the Ghana News Agency (GNA) at her residence at Saltpond, Madam Esi Banowah, owner of the animals said both the sheep and the goat by some coincidence delivered on the same day, but the sheep refused to breast-feed its two lambs. As a result one died on the third day from starvation.


click to read more...

Nursing a grudge over breast-feeding (The Plain Dealer)

The first question in the ask-the-doctor newspaper column was: "Does breast-feeding increase the bust size?"

I happened to be editing the column, some years ago on the copy desk of another paper, and thought it would be a nice touch to add a new top to the answer: "It depends on what you feed them. But seriously . . ."



click to read more...

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Is the Breast Better? (ABC News)

July 13, 2006 — Do you cringe when you see a woman breast-feeding in public? Or do you pass judgment when you see a woman buy milk formula for her newborn? Americans have mixed visceral reactions to breast-feeding, and a recent breast-feeding ad campaign has brought those reactions to a roiling boil.


The U.S. government spent $2 million on an ad campaign to promote breast-feeding. One of the ads shows a pregnant woman logrolling; another shows her riding a mechanical bull. Both ads ask: "You wouldn't take this kind of risk with your baby, so then why would you take the risk by not breast-feeding?"


America has one of the lowest breast-feeding rates of any industrialized country. That could be due, in part, to how uneasy Americans get when it comes to seeing a woman nursing in public.



click to read more...

Hospital Baby-Formula Freebies Spur Controversy (Women's E News)

BOSTON (WOMENSENEWS)--For years, hospitals have sent new mothers home with a gift bag of goodies.

The bags, usually stamped with the logo of an infant formula manufacturer, often contain baby books, diapers and coupons for infant-care products. They also often contain free infant formula donated by manufacturers, a practice that is becoming increasingly controversial.

This spring, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ended a two-year breastfeeding campaign by the New York-based Ad Council warning that not breastfeeding could hurt a newborn's health.



click to read more...

Nursing story big on Web (The Free Press)

Breastfeeding enthusiasts come to defense of Kyle mom

BUDA, Texas (STPNS) -- After The Free Press reported last week that Michelle Hickey was asked not to breastfeed her baby in public at the Kyle Municipal Swimming Pool, she discovered that her defenders were just a mouse click away.

“Once these stories catch on, mothers really advocate for their babies and especially their breastfeeding choices,” said Amy Miller, founder of the Kyle branch of La Leche League, which supports breastfeeding mothers. “The phone has definitely been ringing here at my house. I’m getting calls from women across Texas.”



click to read more...

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Breast-feeding linked to less bed-wetting (United Press International)

A U.S. study concludes children who are breast-fed as infants have a lower rate of bed-wetting after the age of 5.

click to read more...

Baby You Were Born To Breastfeed (Scoop Independent News))

Babies are born to breastfeed and without doubt exclusive breastfeeding from birth to six months of age represents an ideal window of opportunity for reducing the risk of obesity and diabetes.

Presenting an oral submission to the Health Committee today, the Infant Feeding Association of New Zealand (IFANZ) will outline some of the biological mechanisms that set artificially fed infants apart from those who breastfeed.

“Comparing breastfeeding to artificial feeding is like comparing a nutritious home-cooked meal to a third-rate takeaway”, says Marcia Annandale, Trustee and Coordinator of IFANZ.



click to read more...

Milk of human kindness (Naples Daily News)

Breast-milk bank in Southwest Florida helping mothers and babies all over the country


Got milk? Ashley Rodriguez does, and she’s giving it away.

The 30-year-old who gave birth four months ago to daughter Chloe donates extra breast milk to the Family Birth Center of Fort Myers.

Rodriguez is one of hundreds of women nationwide who donate milk to mothers who cannot produce their own, specifically in the case of mothers who’ve given birth to premature babies that specific nutritional needs.


click to read more...

Public Breastfeeding (The Courier-Journal)

Kentucky mothers who breastfeed their babies will no longer have to fear being asked to leave restaurants, malls and other public places. Approved as SB 106, the new law makes it clear that breastfeeding in public is not a crime.



click to read more... (scroll down)

Breast-Feeding in Public Completely Legal Beginning Today (WTVQ 36)

Do you think it's indecent exposure for a nursing mother to breast feed her child in public?

As of July 12, it's legal in Kentucky.



click to read more...(video also available)

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

La Leche celebrates 50th (Berkshire Eagle Online)

DALTON — Breastfeeding. Say it. Breastfeeding. One more time: breastfeeding.
Though it's a lifestyle that some people may blush or boo at, it's something that the members and groups of La Leche League International have been practicing and promoting now for 50 years.

The mothers of the La Leche (pronounced lay-chay) League of Berkshire County gathered last evening with their friends and families in Pine Grove Park to share potluck sandwiches and snacks in celebration of their shared experience of being mothers who chose to breastfeed their children.

They also shared their personal stories about how they came to La Leche and how it has been helping women all over the county and the world.



click to read more...

Monday, July 10, 2006

Mother's milk a precious commodity for premature babies (My San Antonio)

A study in the Journal of Pediatrics found that feeding tiny premature babies mother's milk may actually help their mental development later in life.

Breastfeeding mother Jennifer Nava knows that everyday her premature twins thrive is another miracle. Mateo and Eliud Nava were born in May, theree months early.

While they gain strength at University Hospital in San Antonio, Nava pumps breast milk every three hours, freezes it and brings it to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.

"Of course, it (pumping breast milk) takes a lot of time, and then recovering also, it's a little painful at first, but it's all worth it," Nava said. "You can't get that anywhere else. It's not like formula."



click to read more...

Right to breast-feed, nudity law on agenda (Wichita Eagle)

Breast-feeding mothers will be exempt from local anti-nudity laws if the Wichita City Council accepts a proposed change to the law at its meeting Tuesday.

The proposal would bring Wichita's obscenity laws in line with a new state law that protects a woman's right to breast-feed "in any place she has the right to be."

According to the current city law, display of the female breast -- specifically the center of the breast -- is considered nudity, and, consequently, off-limits in public. Violations are punishable by a $2,500 fine and a year in jail.

The proposed change would add "a mother breast-feeding her child" as an exemption.



click to read more...

Friday, July 07, 2006

UNICEF's Regional Training Course on Protecting Breastfeeding to be held in Baku (Today.Az)

Second Sub-Regional Training Course on implementing the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes to be held on July 10-14 in Baku, Azerbaijan.

If every baby were exclusively breastfed from birth for 6 months, an estimated 1.5 million lives would be saved each year. Not just saved but enhanced, because breastmilk is the perfect food for a baby's first six months of life - no manufactured product can equal it.

In 1981, the World Health Assembly, which consists of the health ministers of almost all countries, responded vigorously to inappropriate promotional efforts of the infant-food industry by adopting the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk substitutes, drafted by WHO, UNICEF, NGOs and representatives of the infant food industry.


The Code establishes minimum standards to regulate marketing practices by setting out the responsibilities of companies, health workers, governments and others and provides standards for the labelling of breastmilk substitutes.



click to read more...

'Breast ironing' to stunt girls' growthwidespread (CNN.com)

YAOUNDE, Cameroon (Reuters) -- Worried that her daughters' budding breasts would expose them to the risk of sexual harassment and even rape, their mother Philomene Moungang started 'ironing' the girls' bosoms with a heated stone.

"I did it to my two girls when they were eight years old. I would take the grinding stone, heat it in the fire and press it hard on the breasts," Moungang said.

"They cried and said it was painful. But I explained that it was for their own good."

"Breast ironing" -- the use of hard or heated objects or other substances to try to stunt breast growth in girls -- is a traditional practice in West Africa, experts say.



click to read more...

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Help get H-1782 passed

We only have until the end of July to get this bill passed - your action is critically important!

Here's how you can help -

Call your elected officials in Massachusetts. Not sure who they are? Go to the Mass.gov website and look up your city or town. Your state legislators are listed in the community profile.

When you call, just let the person who answers the phone know that you want your reps to support H-1782, the breastfeeding in public act. The nice person who answers will ask for your name and address in order to authenticate the call.

You can also write letters or send faxes; calls are most strongly recommended, but a letter makes for a nice follow up to that phone call and allows you to expound upon the issue.

The Office of Child Advocacy at Children's Hospital has set up an action alert with an email you can send to your representatives. It takes only a few minutes!

You can also help by spreading the word. The more people we can get to call and write, the better! Our legislators need to know that there is a strong level of support for this bill, and that we want to see it passed!!

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Breast-feeding protest draws crowd, attention (The Journal Times Online)

RACINE - Approximately 20 women and their children came out to support Rebecca Cook Saturday afternoon at a nurse-in in front of the Victoria's Secret store at Regency Mall.

Cook said she was back at the store to protest "because they harassed me and that other mom in Boston."

Cook said she and a friend were shopping at the store last week, when she asked for the use of a dressing room where she could nurse her daughter. She was told there weren't any available, and Cook offered to sit in the corner, in the back of the dressing room hallway. Staff members told her that was not acceptable.


click to read more...

Breast-Feeding May Protect Against Bed-Wetting (Forbes.com)

WEDNESDAY, July 5 (HealthDay News) -- Babies who are breast-fed for longer than three months are less likely to become bed-wetters, a new study suggests.

"Although this data is preliminary data, my advice [to mothers] would be to breast-feed their babies longer than three months for the developmental advantages this provides, and one of those may be protection against bed-wetting," said study author Dr. Joseph G. Barone, a pediatrics expert at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J.



click to read more...

Alabama Allow Breastfeeding in Public (WTVY)

The Alabama legislature passed a law in April saying a mother may breastfeed her child in any public place, and the law went into effect this Saturday.

News 4 spoke with Wiregrass residents who say they support the new law.

Gail Jackson has three children and she breastfed all of them. She was too shy to do it in public, but she isn't offended if someone is discrete about it.

"There was a lady breastfeeding at a table the other day; it was fine. The baby was happy, the family was happy, it was fine,” said Jackson.



click to read more...

Breastfeeding and the Law (Bostonist)

I recently received a petition by e-mail to support passage of a proposed state law that would protect mothers who breast feed in public from being charged with indecent exposure. Is this really a pressing issue? I thought we had protective laws.

- A mom in Somerville

No Mass. law expressly protects breast feeding, putting the Commonwealth in the minority of states (only 14 others have no law that explicitly allows breastfeeding in public places) (you can see a state-by-state summary of breastfeeding laws here).


click to read more...

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Biting the Hand That Feeds You (Palm Beach Post)

OK, well maybe not the hand

Victoria’s Secret became the target of breast-feeding activists this week after a women in Racine, Wis., and Quincy, Mass., went into the popular women’s lingerie store and were told they couldn’t breastfeed their children on the sales floor.

It’s hard to imagine that Victoria’s Secret, of all places, could be anti-breast — or at least squeamish about the partial exposure of a woman’s breast amid the racks of revealing peekaboo attire on sale.

But it happened. The result: Victoria’s Secret was the target of a nationwide “nurse-in” protest this past weekend called for by a group of angry breastfeeding women.



click to read more...

Monday, July 03, 2006

Got breast milk? New state law celebrated (AL.com)

A handful of mothers who nursed their babies Saturday at Colonial Brookwood Village said they were celebrating a new state law that protects a woman's right to breast-feed in public.

"I'm not a confrontational person, but I wanted to bring attention to the new law," said Kelly Kelley, who drove 50 miles from her home in Chilton County to participate.

The law took effect Saturday, and Kelley handed out badges to the other mothers that said, "Got Breastmilk? Alabama does!" Her 8½-month-old daughter wore a shirt that said, "Breastmilk, the real comfort proteins."



click to read more...

Woman Fights For Breast-Feeding Rights (cbs13.com)

(AP) RACINE, Wis. A woman offended when Victoria's Secret staff gave her only the option of an employee restroom in which to nurse her baby organized a nursing protest in front of the store.

About 20 women and children came out in support of Rebecca Cook in front of the Victoria's Secret store at the Regency Mall in Racine on Saturday.

Cook said she was shopping at the store with a friend last week when she asked to use a dressing room where she could nurse her daughter. When she was told no room was available, she offered to sit in the rear of the dressing room hallway but was told that was unacceptable, she said.

"They opened up their employee restroom, which is disgusting," she said. "I said, `No, I don't eat in the bathroom and my daughter doesn't eat in the bathroom."'


click to read more...

Breastfeeding Moms Blast Victoria's Secret in Nationwide Protests (Daily News Central)

Saturday was a day of protest against Victoria's Secret as mothers gathered to nurse their babies in front of the sexy lingerie stores at malls across the US.

The women were expressing solidarity with two mothers who were told by Victoria's Secret staff to use bathrooms to breastfeed their infants in separate incidents in Wisconsin and Massachusetts.



click to read more...

Breast-Feeding Moms Protest Victoria's Secret (ABC News)

RACINE, Wis. -- A woman who said she was offended when Victoria's Secret staff asked her to nurse her baby in an employee restroom organized a nursing protest in front of the store as part of a national nurse-in.


About 20 women and children came out in support of Rebecca Cook in front of the Victoria's Secret store at the Regency Mall in Racine on Saturday.


Cook said she was shopping at the store with a friend last week when she asked to use a dressing room to nurse her daughter. When she was told no room was available, she offered to sit in the rear of the dressing room hallway but was told that was unacceptable, she said.


"They opened up their employee restroom, which is disgusting," she said. "I said, 'No, I don't eat in the bathroom and my daughter doesn't eat in the bathroom."'



click to read more...

Breast Feeding Mothers Protest Outside Victoria's Secret Stores (Medical News Today)

Rebecca Cook and baby went into a Victoria's Secret store. The mother needed to feed her child so she asked whether she could use a dressing room to breast feed her baby girl. An employee told her there was no available room there. Rebecca Cook said she would not mind sitting at the back of the dressing room hallway. The employee said this was not acceptable and told her to nurse her baby in the staff toilets.

Cook said that she does not eat in toilets and that her daughter doesn't either.

Limited Brands, Inc. is the parent company of Victoria's Secret. A spokesman said the company apologises for the incident. He said the company does have a policy of allowing mothers to nurse in its stores.

The word soon got around of a nursing mother with a similar problem at another Victoria's Secret store in Massachusetts.

Nursing mothers began to protest. 15 mothers breast-fed their babies outside a store in Westlake, Cleveland, Ohio. Breast-feeding in public places has been legal in Ohio since last year.

The mothers' message is a simple one - breast-feeding is not dirty, it is not something that has to be done in a toilet.



click to read more...

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Victoria's Secret welcomes breast-feeding protesters (The Plain Dealer)

Westlake- Lactation and lacy lingerie were the subjects of a national nurse-in Saturday as breast-feeding mothers across the country let their kids chug-a-lug in front of Victoria's Secret stores.

Fifteen mothers armed with hungry babies gathered on the sidewalk outside the Crocker Park Victoria's Secret store in Westlake where scantily clad mannequins seemed delighted by the peaceful, half-hour demonstration.

"It's kind of ironic that Victoria's Secret, which plasters breasts everywhere, is offended at seeing breasts used for their intended purpose," said Anna Mauser-Martinez, who organized the local nurse-in and volunteered that she happened to be wearing a pair of Victoria's Secret underwear.

Victoria's Secret - owned by Columbus-based Limited Brands Inc. - became the target of breast-feeders when two nursing mothers in Massachusetts and Wisconsin said they were hassled last month by store employees. A call to Victoria Secret's corporate headquarters for comment was not returned Saturday. Last June, Ohio legislators legalized breast-feeding in public places.



click to read more...

Angry moms hold nurse-in at Victoria's Secret (BostonHerald.com)

More than a dozen mothers held a nurse-in yesterday outside Victoria’s Secret, accusing the company that has made a bundle off breasts of discriminating against nursing mothers.

“How ironic,” Jessie Chandler said as she sat on the sidewalk outside the Faneuil Hall lingerie shop, nursing her 9-month-old daughter, Charlotte. “They’ve made millions by perpetuating the stereotype of breasts as solely sexual objects. But when a woman wants to use them for what nature really intended them for - nursing - they kick her out.”

click to read more...

Breast-feeding moms protest at Westfield mall (Post-Tribune )

HOBART — Sarah Fields nursed her 1-year-old son as Westfield Southlake shoppers streamed past.

A few glanced at her and seven other women who gathered Saturday afternoon outside the Victoria’s Secret store.

But if any passers-by noticed that some women were breast-feeding their children, they didn’t seem shocked.

That was one of the points the women participating in Saturday’s “nurse-in” wanted to make.

“You’re certainly going to see a lot less flesh from nursing mothers,” Cindy Lybolt, one of the organizers, said earlier, “than from some of the outfits some people are wearing.”

The women outside Victoria’s Secret had heard, through

e-mail message boards, that nursing mothers had been harassed recently at two Victoria’s Secret stores in Massachusetts and Wisconsin.

It seemed ironic that a company known for selling revealing lingerie would object to using a breast for nursing.



click to read more...

Breast-Feeding Moms Protest (TMJ4)

RACINE- Breast-feeding moms held a nursing protest at Regency Mall in Racine today.
At least 20 women gathered in front of the lingerie store, Victoria's Secret. Two Wisconsin women organized a "nurse-in." The women say they were humiliated after store employes told them they could not breast feed in the store. A representative for Victoria's Secret has apologized for the incident, and says breast-feeding is allowed in their stores.


click to view video...

Nursing mom's protest at mall no secret (The Providence Journal)

A Warwick woman calls attention to the rights of breast-feeding women, in the window of Victoria's Secret in Providence.

PROVIDENCE -- Motherhood was on display in the window of Victoria's Secret at the Providence Place mall yesterday.

Next to mannequins in bikini underwear, a woman who could pass for a model parked her stroller, discreetly lifted her black tank top and nursed her four-month-old son.

The one-woman demonstration at the Providence Place mall's Victoria's Secret was part of a national "nurse-in" designed to raise awareness about the rights of breast-feeding mothers.

The image in the store window caught the eye of a man selling body lotion at a kiosk across the way. Yoav Stein, a 32-year-old Israeli living in Providence, pondered its meaning.

"It look like for me a connection between Victoria's Secret sexy image and motherhood," Stein said in a thick accent. "Mothers can be sexy, too!"




click to read more...

Breast-feeding 'nurse-in' held at Victoria's Secret (KTVZ.com)

SEATTLE - A battle over public breast feeding moved to an unlikely place. Victoria’s Secret, known for its revealing bras, was the location of a breast feeding sit-in Saturday.

The protest, which took place in front the store at Seattle’s University Village, was just shy of a dozen mothers demonstrating what they call a natural right to breast feed. They sat there and breast-fed their babies as they pushed for public nursing.

“There are giant posters up there of half naked women up there, and I think that one right there is showing more boob than anyone here,” said Isadora Eads, mother and protester.



click to read more...

Moms take babies to 'nurse-in' at Clackamas Victoria's Secret (OregonLive)

Katie Gregerson's baby, Brighton, wore a big smile Saturday afternoon. 'He's just been fed,' said Gregerson, 26. She was smiling, too, since she had nursed her son outside a Victoria's Secret store in Clackamas Town Center.

For Gregerson and about a dozen other parents who showed up for a 'nurse-in' at the store, the day was about reinforcing a mother's right to breastfeed her baby in public.

The 'nurse-in' was part of a national grassroots effort scheduled for Saturday afternoon at Victoria's Secret shops around the country. The protest came in the wake of a recent pair of incidents in which mothers in Massachusetts and Wisconsin were told they couldn't breastfeed their babies in Victoria's Secret stores.

click to read more....