Sentences with phrase «young child health»

Ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmers and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create conflicts of interest.
Codex: Trade vs health — global meeting fails to safeguard infant and young child health Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses Bali, Indonesia 24 - 28th November 2014
We respectfully request that the CPS not form any partnerships with formula companies and suggest that the CPS familiarize itself with its own obligations under the Code, specifically WHA Resolution 49.15 which states «financial support for professionals working in infant and young child health [should] not create conflicts of interest.»
Convinced that the protection and promotion of infant feeding, including the regulation of the marketing of breastmilk substitutes, affect infant and young child health directly and profoundly, and are a problem of direct concern to WHO;
WHA Resolution 58.32 2005 Urged Member States: «to ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create conflicts of interest».
Essential Nutrition Actions: improving maternal, newborn, infant and young child health and nutrition 2013.
``... financial support for professionals working in infant and young child health does not create conflicts of interest;»
[3] WHA Resolution 49.15 1996 Preambular para: «Concerned that health institutions and ministries may be subject to subtle pressure to accept, inappropriately, financial or other support for professional training in infant and child health» urged Member States to ensure that «financial support for professionals working in infant and young child health does not create conflicts of interest.»
In order to support infant and young child health, this event should be promoting breastfeeding, the optimal infant feeding practice.
· Commits to full compliance with the WHO International Code of Marketing of Breast - milk Substitutes to protect breastfeeding and infant and young child health.
Commits to full compliance with the WHO International Code of Marketing of Breast - milk Substitutes and subsequent, relevant Resolutions of the World Health Assembly to protect breastfeeding and infant and young child health.
«ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create CONFLICTS OF INTEREST».
World Health Assembly resolution 49.15 expresses «Member states should ensure that the financial support for professionals working in infant and young child health does not create conflicts of interest, especially with regards to the WHO / UNICEF Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative.»
IBFAN notes that the World Health Assembly has addressed the issue of sponsorship in Resolution 49.15 from 1996 and again in Resolution 58.32 from 2005 where it stated care was needed: «to ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create conflict of interest».
WHA Resolution 58.32 calls for action to «ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create CONFLICTS OF INTEREST».
All health care workers including health professionals and their associations to avoid accepting any donations or funds, offers of assistance in cash or kind from companies with a commercial interest in infant and young child health and development, particularly in the feeding of babies;
The World Health Assembly has addressed the issue of sponsorship in Resolution 49.15 from 1996 and again in Resolution 58.32 from 2005 where it stated: «ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create conflict of interest».
(2) to ensure that the financial support for professionals working in infant and young child health does not create conflicts of interest, especially with regard to the WHO / UNICEF Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative;
Patti Rundall, Co-Chair of IBFAN says: «Follow - up formula imarketing has done much harm to infant and young child health and survival — all over the world the companies have used all manner of tactics to promote these expensive products as essential for health, using claims, idealisation, gifts, samples and advertising.
Resolutions WHA 58.32 calls for action «to ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create conflict of interest».
Maternal breastfeeding support is critical to achieve the very important targets of the UN MDGs and effectively reduce under fives deaths, infant and young child health and improve maternal survival.
As a matter of fact increasing support for breastfeeding mothers and babies is considered by the World Health Organization and global experts on infant and young child health to be the most effective and least costly means to improve infant and young child health.
To avoid conflict of interest, health professionals working in infant and young child health should not receive financial support from infant food companies.
«IBFAN's untiring efforts in the promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding have been an important contribution to infant and young child health and survival.
The WHO Global Strategy on Infant and Young Child Health (which the UK is signed up to) states that each country should have:
Resolution WHA58.32 2005 Urges Member States: «to ensure that financial support and other incentives for programmes and health professionals working in infant and young child health do not create conflicts of interest».
Convinced that governments of Member States have important responsibilities and a prime role to play in the protection and promotion of breastfeeding as a means of improving infant and young child health;
It would therefore be ironic if, while breastfeeding rates were to increase in countries with low infant mortality and morbidity, they were allowed to diminish in countries where breastfeeding is still critical to sound infant and young child health.
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