Better workplace policies needed for breastfeeding
2015-08-01
© UNICEF/MEXA2015-00085/Quintos |
NEW YORK/GENEVA/HONG KONG, 1 August, 2015 - Every year, the global community sets aside a week to draw attention to the vital importance of eastfeeding, not only in the lives of the most disadvantaged children but also in the strength of societies. The theme of this year’s World Breastfeeding Week, Breastfeeding and Work -- Let’s make it work!, focuses on what we can do to help millions of working mothers give their babies the best possible start in life -- by supporting stronger workplace policies that promote eastfeeding. We know that eastfeeding helps children to survive and thrive -- enabling infants to withstand infections, providing critical nutrients for the early development of their ains and bodies, and strengthening the bond between mothers and their babies. And the benefits of eastfeeding last a lifetime. A recent Lancet study found that infants who were eastfed for at least one year went on to stay in school longer, score higher on intelligence tests, and earn more as adults than those who were eastfed for only a month. Despite this growing evidence, only 38 per cent of infants around the world today are eastfed exclusively for even the recommended first six months of life. And while eastfeeding rates have increased in all regions of the world, global progress has stalled. |
Governments should lead the charge by making eastfeeding a policy priority in national development plans, increasing resources for programming that supports eastfeeding, and working with communities and families to promote the full benefits of eastfeeding.
But we should also do more to overcome an obstacle that prevents potentially millions of women from eastfeeding: Workplace policies that do not support the right of working mothers to eastfeed their babies on the job.
Today, of the approximately 830 million women workers in the world, the majority do not benefit from workplace policies that support nursing mothers . And this figure does not include women working in informal, seasonal or part-time employment -- often the poorest women in poorer countries -- who may face even greater barriers to continued eastfeeding.
This is not only a loss to working mothers and their babies. It is also a loss to employers. Working mothers with adequate maternity benefits -- including a eastfeeding-supportive workplace -- report increased job satisfaction and greater loyalty to their employers. Breastfed children fall sick less often, so their mothers are absent from work less often, too. These effects in turn contribute to higher productivity -- ultimately benefiting businesses and the larger economies to which they contribute.
Recognizing these connections, the International Labour Organization has adopted three Conventions to establish protective measures for pregnant women and new mothers, including the right to continue eastfeeding -- and to promote feasible options for women who are outside formal work settings. Globally, 67 countries have ratified at least one of the three maternity protection Conventions. More governments should join this growing movement -- and take action to implement these important protections.
We know that eastfeeding improves the lives of millions of children and ultimately benefits families, communities, and societies. Our challenge now is to make eastfeeding work in the workplace, too. Together, we can help working women to eastfeed and reap the benefits for themselves, for their children, and for the health and well-being of future generations.
- Anthony Lake, UNICEF Executive Director and Dr. Margaret Chan, WHO Director General