Nine out of 10 women stop breastfeeding before they want to
Breast vs bottle: the new battleground
Just as the Department of Health is trying to promote breastfeeding, food giant Nestlé, makers of powdered baby milk, is forging links with the Government.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Efforts to encourage more women to breastfeed are being threatened by "
aggressive" lobbying directed at the Government by the baby milk
manufacturing industry, campaigners warned yesterday.
The powdered milk manufacturer Nestlé has forged formal links with the
Department of Health and took a ministerial aide on an all-expenses-paid
trip to South Africa, The Independent on Sunday has discovered.
To coincide with the start of National Breastfeeding Awareness Week today,
the Secretary of State for Health, Alan Johnson, is under pressure to
encourage mothers to give their babies breast milk beyond six months.
Evidence suggests it helps curb obesity in the poorest families and prevents
illness.
Children's charities also want the Government to impose an outright ban on
the promotion of powdered formula milk because they claim it encourages
women to stop breastfeeding too early.
A ban on advertising infant formula for babies up to six months was
introduced in the UK in January. Ministers are considering whether to extend
the ban to follow-on formula milk products.
An investigation by the IoS has uncovered strong ties between Nestlé, the
world's largest baby milk manufacturer, and the Department of Health. Rosie
Cooper, a parliamentary private secretary to the Health minister Ben
Bradshaw, is undergoing a year-long Industry and Parliament Trust fellowship
with Nestlé, and in February went for a week to South Africa as a guest of
the group to oversee its corporate social responsibility activities.
Critics said it was "very worrying" that a member of the Government was
working so closely with Nestlé, which is trying to break into the mainstream
baby milk market in the UK.
Last night the Department of Health insisted it was taking steps to increase
breastfeeding rates, especially among younger women in disadvantaged areas.
To mark National Breastfeeding Awareness Week, mothers will be sent text
messages to persuade them not to give up.
But the NCT (National Childbirth Trust), Unicef, Save the Children and
campaigning group Baby Milk Action, which has organised a boycott of Nestlé,
are demanding the Government go further by introducing tough new laws
cracking down on the multimillion-pound powdered milk market.
The Department of Health declined to say whether the Health Secretary or
other ministers knew of Ms Cooper's links to Nestlé. She has not recorded
the South Africa trip on the Register of MPs' Interests but has said she did
not consider this necessary because her fellowship with Nestlé is registered
with the Electoral Commission.
While she has not breached parliamentary rules, MPs said the decision raised
questions about her judgement.
Ms Cooper's trip to South Africa shows the extent to which Nestlé has forged
links at the heart of government. She and three fellow Labour MPs had their
flights, accommodation and other expenses paid for on the week-long visit,
which took place from 7 to 14 February.
A week later, Ms Cooper, MP for West Lancashire, asked Gordon Brown during
Prime Minister's Questions about coffee and Fairtrade Fortnight, with which
Nestlé is involved.
Campaigners claim Nestlé is still breaking the World Health Organisation
code for marketing breastmilk substitutes by promoting its formula milk in
the developing world.
The World Health Organisation banned the marketing of breast milk
substitutes nearly 30 years ago. But it was only in January this year that
the UK banned the promotion of formula milk to mothers of babies under six
months.
There are rules restricting promotion of follow-on milk for older babies,
including a ban on references to pregnancy and showing babies under six
months in advertisements. Yet there is no outright ban on follow-on formula,
and critics say that a failure to close the loophole would mean mothers were
still being encouraged to give up breastfeeding.
Belinda Phipps, chief executive of the NCT, said: "Research shows that
over-promotion of any sort of formula depresses the breastfeeding rate.
"Nestlé are trying to launch a brand in the UK but they have had
difficulties because of their reputation across the world. Nestlé does do
some good work in order to improve its public profile but it is viewed
really badly around the world.
"Any parliamentarian should be extremely wary of accepting hospitality from
such an unpopular company."
The Liberal Democrat health spokesman, Norman Lamb, said: "It is a massive
error of judgement to have this link with Nestlé, given her [Ms Cooper's]
position.
Mike Brady, campaigns and networking coordinator at Baby Milk Action, said:
"Time and again we see Nestlé trying to ingratiate itself with health
workers and policymakers through gifts, free trips, sponsorship and
so-called partnerships.
"Surely the Government should not look to companies to fund and organise
trips such as this. If there is a legitimate public interest in fact-finding
in South Africa, it should be publicly funded."
Senay Camgoz, Unicef UK spokesman, called on the Government to stop the
infant formula industry exploiting loopholes in the legislation concerning
the advertising of its products.
Ms Cooper defended her work with Nestlé last night. She said: "I was advised
by the registrar of member's interests that I did not have to declare the
trip on the register, as visits undertaken as part of an IPT fellowship are
directly excluded.
"I subsequently contacted and declared the trip with the Electoral
Commission as she advised. I began my fellowship long before becoming a PPS
at the Department of Health.
"I have never raised any issue concerning Nestlé, either in my capacity as a
PPS or as a backbench MP."
The Breastfeeding Manifesto Coalition, an umbrella organisation of 40
charities and royal colleges, including Save the Children, Unicef and the
Royal College of Midwives, also calls for other steps by the Government to
support breastfeeding.
They want the Government to bring England and Wales into line with Scotland,
where women have a legal right to breastfeed in public. Women in England and
Wales are allowed to do this, but if, for example, a restaurant manager
objects, they have no rights enshrined in law.
Research by the NCT shows that nine out of 10 women stop breastfeeding
before they want to.
The Department of Health is to launch a "Breast Buddy" scheme, fronted by
Atomic Kitten singer Jenny Frost, under which women nominate a close friend
or relative to provide emotional support while they are breastfeeding.
Mothers from low-income backgrounds, and those aged 16 to 25, who are less
likely to breastfeed, will be targeted by the initiative.
The Government wants breastfeeding rates to increase by two percentage
points per year. In 2000, 71 per cent of mothers initially breastfed – but
by 2005 the figure had risen to 77 per cent.
Official figures show a clear link between breastfeeding and poverty –
except in London, where rates are high regardless of income. In Knowsley,
Merseyside, one of the most disadvantaged areas in the country, just 28 per
cent of mothers breastfeed. Hartlepool, Stoke-on-Trent, Sunderland,
Middlesbrough and Hull are all in the bottom 10 primary care trust areas.
The top 10 areas are all in London. Lambeth – which does have pockets of
extreme poverty – is top overall, with 93 per cent of mothers breastfeeding.
The Department of Health said the awareness campaign had nothing to do with
the activities of Nestlé. A spokesman said: "We want to show that this is
not just for middle-class white people – we want to give everyone
encouragement for breastfeeding. It is healthy and beneficial for children
and mothers. We want to dispel any myths or public negativity towards it and
tackle inequalities."
Advertisers spend £10 promoting formula for every £1 the NHS spends
encouraging breastfeeding.
Nestlé could not be contacted for comment last night, but its website says:
"Nestlé firmly believe that breastfeeding is the best way to feed a baby,
and we are strongly committed to the promotion of breastfeeding throughout
the world.
"However, some mothers, for a variety of reasons, do not breastfeed, and in
these cases, infant formula is the only product recognised by the World
Health