Breastfeeding advocates found ally with RDC-8
By NINFA B. QUIRANTE
February
18, 2010
CALBAYOG CITY, Samar
– Breastfeeding advocates have found a new and formidable partner in
its advocacy – Eastern Visayas RDC.
Today, the Eastern
Visayas Regional Development Council (RDC) proposed for the Establishment of Breastfeeding
Rooms/Corners in Government offices.
In the latest RDC
meeting held today at the Calbayog Sports Center, sponsored by Mayor
Mel Senen Sarmiento, Regional Director Forter Puguon of the Department
of Labor and Employment (DOLE) presented the reasons why such move is
pushed.
The move, said
Puguon’s presentation is consistent with the United Nations Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) number one which is eradicating extreme poverty
and hunger.
“Breastfeeding, “
added Puguon “will also try to reduce child mortality.”
The DOLE Director also
said that doing the act of establishment of breastfeeding
rooms/corners in government offices will create an atmosphere of
harmonizing with the right of the child and the UN
MDG.
“It is also anchored
in the global strategy on Infant and young Child Feeding (IYF-DOH)”
stressed the presenter.
Aside from the given
reasons, breastfeeding is also consistent with the much publicized
Nutritional Guidelines for Filipinos and the Updated Medium Term
Philippine Plan of Action for Nutrition (MTPPAN) for 2008-2010, he
added.
Because mothers refuse
to breastfeed, 30% of under-five children are underweight, according
to the data presented.
The data stressed that
only 16.1% of Filipinos are exclusively breastfed.
Meanwhile, a Filipina
mom blogger wrote:
‘Marketing by milk formula companies has become increasingly
aggressive. The number of women who breastfeed their infants has gone
down dramatically in just a few years, while the sales and profits of
the companies have risen. The irony, in the words of Sen. Edgardo
Angara, author of the Rooming-In and Breastfeeding Act of 1992, is
that each year we import $400 million in milk formula, but spend P536
million to bury 15,000 bottle-fed babies, and another P3.5 billion to
treat infant malnutrition and diarrhea. We needlessly fritter away our
foreign exchange reserves. We forget nature’s first form of
immunization, enabling the infant to fight serious infection. We forgo
the benefits of birth spacing as a form of natural birth control.’
As the RDC meeting
folded up, RDC members could not decide yet whether to support the
move or not, one member asked whether this does not violate a Civil
Service rule, they still have to ask.
Another said,”
Then, if bringing babies in the office may transgress civil service
rules, at least let the mother express her milk in the workplace and
store it in a refrigerator that the office can supply-at the very
least.” (PIA-Samar)