The stroller is also equipped with cup holders to keep your drinking water, keys or
milk for the children within reach.
Not exact matches
Motion
for debate: «In order
for RCPCH as a professional body to avoid institutional conflicts of interest and thus maintain its reputation as an unbiased, independent educator and advocate
for child health, the College should decline any commercial transactions or any other kind of funding or support from all companies that market products
within the scope of the WHO Code on the marketing of breast
milk substitutes
My first
child, now 4 years old, puked up my
milk and could only tolerate formula (although the pump worked great
for me); but with my newborn daughter, I began drying up
within the first two weeks of pumping, and I don't know why.
I found this statistic startling: 800,000
children's lives would be saved every year because of the benefits of breast
milk if they were to be breastfed
within an hour of being born, only fed breast
milk for the first 6 months of life and then continued until they hit the age of 2.
In fact, breastfeeding is the ideal «medicine»
for a sick
child, since there are factors
within the breast
milk that protect his gastrointestinal system and fight off illness.
Baby
Milk Action comment: UNICEF's Legal Officer confirmed long ago in response to a request
for clarification on contact with the public from Baby
Milk Action: «Article 5.5 of the Code states quite clearly that the marketing personnel of companies manufacturing products
within the scope of the Code, in their business capacity, «should not seek direct or indirect contact of any kind with pregnant women or with mothers of infant and young
children.»
Motion that was passed: «In order
for RCPCH as a professional body to avoid institutional conflicts of interest and thus maintain its reputation as an unbiased, independent educator and advocate
for child health, the College should decline any commercial transactions or any other kind of funding or support from all companies that market products
within the scope of the WHO Code on the marketing of breast
milk substitutes
Companies claim such a marketing strategy is not a violation, though these toddler
milks (and complementary foods) come
within the scope of the Code if they are marketed as replacements
for that part of a
child's diet which is best fulfilled by breast
milk.
Additional reasons
for deciding not to breastfeed can include concern about the quality and quantity of breast
milk, and partner and family support, which are common across developed and developing countries.10, 11 Women who decide not to breastfeed are also more likely to have smoked during their pregnancy, be primiparous mothers (i.e., having their first
child), and to have a
child born low birth weight or with complex health issues such as cystic fibrosis.9, 12 Prenatal and post-natal stressful experiences may also reduce the duration of breastfeeding.13 Finally, several studies suggest that mother's who return to work
within the first 6 months postpartum or anticipate an early return to full - time employment, are less likely to breastfeed.
In 2016 the WHO released a report that concluded that if every
child were breastfed
within an hour of birth, given only breast
milk for the first six months of life, and continued breastfeeding up to the age of two years, about 800,000
children's lives would be saved globally every year.»