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FAMARI BARRO SAYS: NIGERIA NEEDS TO RISE UP TO THE CALL FOR BETTER……….

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FAMARI BARRO SAYS: NIGERIA NEEDS TO RISE UP TO THE CALL FOR BETTER……….

By: Safiya Abdulrahim Dabban.                   08036377731

Save the Children International has called on Government, Ministries of Health and Nutrition, Information and Culture and other stakeholders to do more in addressing the needs of breastfeeding mothers at home, work and communities.

In a statement by the Country Director, Save the Children International Nigeria Famari Barro says Nigeria needs to rise up to the call for better breastfeeding friendly environments, both for the urban and rural settings, as well as the formal and informal working class groups of breastfeeding mothers.”

According to the Statement, Breastfeeding provides vital health and nutritional benefits for children with positive lifelong impacts, building healthier populations, innovative and productive workforces for the future

The statement calls for a review of laws and measures that deprive lactating mothers the opportunity to practice exclusive breastfeeding both at formal and informal settings.

It says Children across Nigeria must be fed well, solely on exclusive breastmilk for the first 6-months of their lives.

The call is part of this year’s commemoration of World Breastfeeding Week from first to seven of this month of August 2023 with the theme “Enabling Breastfeeding, Making a difference for Working Parents

It notes that , Government laws and policies must support and ensure an implementation of at least 18 weeks, even more 6 months and also to paid maternity leave to promote exclusive breastfeeding across the country.

It maintains that, the 6 months paid maternity leave and 2 weeks paternity leave bill should be passed and signed into law to provide sustainable support for breastfeeding from the government.

“Government and partners need to set up mother and baby areas to ensure that mothers in refugee camps can receive adequate information, advice, encouragement, and counselling on infant and young child feeding practices. Breastfeeding support is possible regardless of workplace, sector, or contract type”

“Employers must provide maternity protections and paid entitlements to improve children and women’s health thereby increasing exclusive breastfeeding for the well-being of the child”

“Breastmilk is the most important meal for a child after birth. Exclusive breastfeeding is the feeding of an infant with only breastmilk for the first 6 months of the child’s life without water or formula as directed by the World Health Organization”

“This is ideal for the child as breast milk contains nutrients and antibodies that protect the child from common illnesses. However, Nigeria falls short on this mandate as only 29% of infants aged 0-6 months are exclusively breastfed leaving 71% of infants lacking the benefits of breast milk in their formative years. Only 9% of organizations have a workplace breastfeeding policy”

One of the challenges of exclusive breastfeeding is the return to work of breastfeeding mothers after barely 18 weeks of maternity leave.

“The Nigeria workspace forces mothers to return to work or risk their salaries or income. According to the Global, Breastfeeding Scorecard 2022 “Protecting Breastfeeding through further investments and policy actions”, only 10% of countries meet the recommended standard of countries with recommended policies to protect, promote, and support breastfeeding”

“No country in Africa meets the National requirements for paid maternity leave as stipulated by the International Labour Organization. This percentage has hardly changed over the past eight years. The collective target for 2030 is to have at least 25% of countries following the ILO recommendation which is to have at least 18 weeks standard maternity leave”

“Save the Children International as a leading child-centred organization in Nigeria considers the lack of exclusive breastfeeding for children of working class women in any sector as a disservice to the right of the child to survive. A child deprived of exclusive breastfeeding can suffer, malnutrition, pneumonia, infectious morbidity, childhood obesity, type 1 and type 2 diabetes, leukemia, and sudden infant death syndrome”

It says very child should enjoy the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding both in formal and informal workspaces.

“If this persist then the Breast Milk Substitute products and other foods for infants and young children – the world over – continue to undermine a mother’s ability to make an informed choice on infant and young child feeding”

Upon their return to work, mothers also need work breaks and appropriate nursing facilities for continued breastfeeding. This encourages and helps mothers exclusively breastfeed after maternity leave.

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