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General News of Sunday, 20 August 2017

Source: classfmonline.com

Prioritise breastfeeding – First Lady

Mrs Rebecca encouraged all individuals and institutions to be advocates of breastfeeding Mrs Rebecca encouraged all individuals and institutions to be advocates of breastfeeding

First Lady Mrs Rebecca Akufo-Addo on Friday 18th August 2017 urged mothers to give their babies the best start in life by breastfeeding them for as long as necessary, noting that breast milk provides children with the right nutrition and protection needed, especially in the early stages of their life.

Launching this year’s World Breastfeeding Week celebration in Takoradi under the theme: “sustaining breastfeeding together”, the First Lady said it is important for mothers to know that breastfeeding is a God-given process specifically designed to enhance a baby´s growth and development and no substitute is comparable. She emphasised, “The health benefits of breastfeeding don´t just last during infancy, but are sustained throughout childhood, adolescence and into adulthood as well.”

Mrs Akufo-Addo noted that despite the compelling research in favour of breastfeeding, a report by Ghana Health Service indicates that only 52 per cent of Ghanaian mothers exclusively breastfeed their children suggesting “that a large number of Ghanaian babies are deprived of the major nutritional, health and psychological benefits of breastfeeding.”

The First lady called for “strong partnership made up of government, health partners, health practitioners, communities, non-governmental organisations, media and civil society to advocate and help create utmost protective and supportive environment exclusively for breastfeeding” in order to achieve at least a goal of 80 per cent of all babies born in Ghana exclusively breastfed by the year 2021.

She also proposed a five-point action plan which she noted will help achieve this goal by 2021. This, according to the First Lady, includes improving support systems and creating conducive environments for women to breastfeed in workplaces, markets, homes, communities and at social gatherings; enforcing laws on marketing of breast milk substitutes to end persistent violations of this law and protect exclusive breastfeeding; extend the period of maternity leave to minimum of 14 weeks as stipulated by International Labour Organisation’s (ILO) Maternity Protection Convention, 2000; develop breastfeeding promotional messages and undertake communication campaigns to improve knowledge about benefits and address negative perceptions about breastfeeding; and come together as a nation and put our collective resources together to support breastfeeding of babies.

She also encouraged all well-meaning individuals and institutions to be advocates of breastfeeding to “make sure that every child born in Ghana will be given a chance to survive, grow and develop into a healthy and strong citizen.”