Extended Breastfeeding Mothers
received on my local listserve
Help Support the Breastfeeding Promotion Act
Forty-seven states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands already have enacted various laws protecting breastfeeding mothers, but they are not uniform and most are not comprehensive. Ask your congressperson to support the Breastfeeding Promotion Act of 2007 to provide a unified national policy to keep mothers, their children and their communities healthy!
The Breastfeeding Promotion Act of 2007 includes four provisions:
· Amends the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to protect breastfeeding women from being fired or discriminated against in the workplace
· Provides tax incentives for businesses that establish private lactation areas in the workplace
· Provides for a performance standard to ensure breast pumps are safe and effective
· Allows breastfeeding equipment and lactation services to be tax-deductible for families
To contact your congressperson, visit the USBC?s call to action: org2.democracyinact ion.org/o/ 5162/campaign. jsp?campaign_KEY= 468
The United States Breastfeeding Committee Recommends Mother Support for Six Months of Exclusive Breastfeeding
The United States Breastfeeding Committee (USBC) proudly [joined] organizations from more than 120 countries to celebrate World Breastfeeding Week 2008. In the United States, the percentage of infants ever breastfed increased from 60 percent of those born in 1993-1994 to 74 percent of those born in 2005. Despite this increase in the number of women who initiate breastfeeding, only about 12 percent of infants continue to be breastfed exclusively for a full six months.
Exclusive breastfeeding through six months of age, defined as an infant's consumption of human milk with no supplementation of any type (no nonhuman milk, juice, water, or solid foods), except for vitamins, minerals, and medications, is the standard recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the Health Resources and Services Administration, and the Office on Women's Health of the US Department of Health and Human Services. Scientific evidence clearly shows that breastfed infants have a lower incidence and severity of infections than formula-fed infants: less severe diarrhea, and fewer respiratory and ear infections. Evidence also underscores that a lack of breastfeeding is associated with increased risk of leukemia, obesity, diabetes mellitus, and deaths associated with sudden infant death syndrome.
Yet without strong social, economic, and political support for a mother's choice to breastfeed, these benefits prove beyond the reach of many American families. USBC Chair Joan Younger Meek, MD, MS, RD, FAAP, FABM, IBCLC, urges us to rise to the challenge and meet the goal of six months of exclusive breastfeeding: "As a nation we still have far to go to ensure mothers have the opportunity to breastfeed exclusively for six months and to continue breastfeeding for the first year of life and beyond. The USBC advocates for mother support in health systems, the workplace, the community, and the family.
To read the press release in its entirety, visit the USBC website: www.usbreastfeeding .org/News- and-Events/ 2008-08-USBC- WBW-Press- Release.pdf
Proud Nursing Mama to Amber Jolie (2/3/07) and Angel Baby Cameron Taylor (m/c 3/20/06 at 11.5 weeks)
check out this cool website: www.freerice.com
Come Join Me In My Groups...
group owner: Meals: Cheap, Easy and Healthy, New and Soon-To-Be Breastfeeders, Alpha Phi Omega Moms, This is Birdland (Baltimore Orioles Fans), and William and Mary Moms
group admin: Chef Tia's Party Mom's (Pampered Chef), AP Moms of Toddler, and Smarty Pants