Feb 19, 2022
India lacks public breastfeeding rooms; something which the Delhi High Court enquired about while hearing a 9-month-old Ayan’s plea. Of course, the plea was routed through his parents who sought adequate baby feeding and child care facilities to enable lactating mothers feed their children. The response was sought from Ministry of Women and Child Development, state government and civic authorities.
Something which India knows culturally and understands is that breast milk, which is analogous to ‘liquid gold’, is the most significant part of a child’s early upbringing as its impact lasts much longer. If celluloid is to be trusted, the practice of breastfeeding is culturally much respected in the country; or apparently so, like many other women centric practices. While India is still battling with the mindset to promote breastfeeding practices, standards are being set elsewhere.
When Australian Member of Parliament Larissa Waters breastfed her daughter inside the Parliament last year while moving a Senate motion, she not only made history but also made a strong statement in favor of the practice.
Back in India, it is unfortunate to note that mothers in India are not feeding their babies adequately. As per a report on breastfeeding trends, only about 8 million of the 26 million babies born every year are breastfed within an hour of birth. Ranked India at 31st place out of the 51 countries surveyed, the report found only 46% of babies born in India was breastfed in the first 24 hours of birth. Neighboring countries fared better. The percentage of babies who were breastfed within the first 24 hours in Sri Lanka stood at 75.8 and in Bangladesh stood at 64.
This dismal picture can be corrected if there is a multi-pronged approach to the problem of lower breastfeeding rates in India.
Pregnant Mothers Should Be Imparted Knowledge and Advice
Pregnant women should be given proper guidance during their pregnancy about lactation and its immense importance, practical knowledge, proper feeding practices, pumps and dietary care. It is found that women who are given prior guidance are able to adopt better feeding practices and have better feeding experiences than those who have not been given such guidance. This can be done by both government as well as private players but a proper course to impart guidance should be charted out and public-private partnerships in this direction can go a long way in achieving better results. Private clinics can be roped in by the government and given incentives to provide guiding sessions to women including those from economically deprived background who may otherwise not come forward themselves to avail advice in this regard.
There are a lot of myths associated with breastfeeding in India and those need to be quelled. First time mothers even in urban India experience issues emanating from lack of knowledge. Since families are only getting nuclear, most women have nowhere to go to seek advice on best feeding practices. The fact has to be emphasized to would-be mothers that while breastfeeding might require greater effort from them given their busy schedules, it is the best choice for babies and is absolutely worth the effort. Babies who have been breastfed have better chances of surviving, lower chances of acquiring diseases, malnutrition and stunting. Apart from better bonding between mother and baby, Breastfeeding also leads to improvement in cognitive performance and better educational achievements in the child.
It also needs to be emphasized that breastfeeding also holds health benefits for women. Women who breastfeed their babies for sufficiently long period of time have lower risk of breast cancer, ovarian cancer and type 2 diabetes.
Building Enabling Infrastructure
The India Newborn Action Plan (INAP) developed by Ministry of Health & Family Welfare in 2014 has been targeting a 90 percent rate of initiation of breastfeeding within an hour of birth by 2025. To achieve these rates, there is a need for investing in creating an enabling environment for mothers, especially the working mothers.
In Delhi, where the ratio of working women is higher, it was found by a survey that about 41 percent mothers felt that their offices did not have any nursing facilities. Clearly, there is a need for making laws and regulations for building infrastructure that is conducive for mother to breastfeed their babies and maintain a proper feeding schedule. There should be laws for workplaces to have breastfeeding rooms. Women in public places feel awkward in breastfeeding their new-born because of the public gaze. To overcome this problem, government has to come out with proper feeding rooms at public places. After all, if mother’s milk is helping in achieving lower instances of diarrhea and pneumonia among babies, government’s overall cost of providing healthcare to citizens will go down by having such rooms at public places.
A case in point here can be how the Australian Parliament has been made a more friendly place to young mothers over the past few years and how Larisa Waters was able to breastfeed her baby inside the Parliament. The Australian Parliament, as it stands today in this regard, can be a good example and can be the way forward for India in many of its endeavours to promote breastfeeding practices.
Setting Up and Promoting Human Milk Bank
Setting up human milk bank is another way India can, without argument, make her babies stronger. The sad news was that despite its obvious advantages, such banks were non-existent in India until a few years ago. The good news in this regard is that there is some action now and some banks have come up. Even better news is that government is considering a network of banks across 661 newborn care units across the country. The banks collect, pasteurize and store milk and is used to feed babies who cannot be nursed by their mothers because the mothers are not producing their own milk for whatever reason. It is also given to those babies who sadly lose their mothers right after birth.
India can learn from Brazil, another developing country like India, in this regard. In 2011, Brazil’s milk collection in its milk banks was 1,65,000 litre and was given to 1,70,000 babies. As many as 1,66,000 mothers were donating their milk to these banks. There is no reason why Indian cannot replicate that success. There has been only a start in India in this field, that too in metros. All we need is a strong will and push towards achieving this goal.
The public and the private can partner on this front as well and plug this crucial gap. While private companies can come up for setting up such banks, the government can design an attractive policy framework and distribution mechanism which can make the environment conducive for such endeavors. The private sector will only augment government’s efforts in providing the ‘Liquid Gold’ to those babies who cannot have it from their own mothers.
At the same time, it is a key responsibility of doctors to ensure they administer the right knowledge and guidance to new mothers to groom them towards this practice. The increasing of the maternity leave period to six months is a very welcome initiative that will most certainly boost the practice among working women. We must remember that investing in breastfeeding is the single biggest healthcare investment we can make towards improving child health in India.
The responsibility of educating the mother lies not only with the doctors but with other stakeholders as well, including husbands and other family members. Although mothers would be feeding their children, what India essentially needs is to educate the family more as it is the families which will come together to form societies and make a conducive environment for breastfeeding in public and private space. This is important given the scenario that women actually don’t have the right avenues of childcare in public in the second most populous country of the world.