>From http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=17325
Mother's Milk

By Kristin Van Tassel, Prairie Writers Circle
December 4, 2003

The benefits of breastfeeding are widely acknowledged, but few people see
this as relevant to anyone but the parents of babies. In fact, there are
advantages directly related to larger concerns, particularly food and the
environment. Human breast milk is one of our most valuable natural
resources.


It boosts infants' immune systems. It is designed to meet their specific
volume and nutritional needs, with no additives or supplements. It
eliminates the waste of formula's packaging and discarded leftovers.


While formula requires fossil fuel for its production and distribution,
every nursing mother has a fresh, locally produced food ready to serve to
her infant anytime, anywhere. Rather than relying on multinational
companies, breastfeeding mothers empower themselves – and, thereby, their
home communities also – to nourish their children.


Breastfed babies are also less likely to suffer from obesity later in life.
And exclusive and frequent breastfeeding can work as birth control, limiting
population growth.


Breastfeeding should be of interest to anyone concerned about landfill
waste, global warming, agribusiness, multinational conglomerates, obesity
and overpopulation.


But despite its large support in the medical community and positive coverage
in the media, the culture of breastfeeding continues to face troubling
challenges. Like the canary in the coalmine, it reveals systemic problems
that bode ill for effectively addressing more complex and controversial food
and environmental concerns.


The steady decline of breastfeeding during the first three quarters of the
20th century resulted directly from industrialization's move toward
large-scale food production and the subsequent overproduction of cow's milk.
The dairy industry's search for new markets led to development and promotion
of infant formula, with devastating results for the culture of
breastfeeding.


By 1972, only 25 percent of American women left the hospital nursing their
newborns. And of these women, virtually unsupported in a society that had
lost the experience and knowledge necessary to sustain the practice, very
few continued nursing beyond the first two months of their children's lives.


The good news is that breastfeeding has made a remarkable comeback during
the past 25 years, due in large part to the organization of breastfeeding
support groups, encouragement by progressive doctors and the perseverance of
individual mothers. Now, 70 percent of women leave the hospital nursing
their infants, a marked improvement in one generation.


Still, the culture of breastfeeding is undermined and compromised. It is
sobering to realize that despite stacks of supporting scientific studies,
universal endorsement (or at least lip service), and an army of local
volunteers, lactation consultants and support groups, only 16 percent of
American mothers nurse their babies for the full year recommended by the
American Academy of Pediatrics and the U.S. surgeon general.


The formula industry is alive and well in both rich and poor countries. It
is standard for companies to give mothers in U.S. hospitals gifts and free
cans of formula. Now the manufacturers are fighting an Advertising Council
public service announcement for breastfeeding.


Although the inability to breastfeed is extremely rare, too many women,
faced with the large presence of formula in the maternity ward and
supermarket, assume supplementing or replacing their breast milk is
desirable, even necessary. This belief undermines confidence in their
bodies, which hinders their breastfeeding success.


Additionally, social and economic forces in the United States discourage
extended nursing. While no one objects to a baby being fed with a bottle in
a restaurant, park or church, nursing remains taboo in many public places.
And although it benefits employers to support breastfeeding since breastfed
babies are sick less, which means their parents miss fewer work days, many
businesses fail to give mothers the flexibility to realistically fit
breastfeeding into their working lives.


We live in a society where our domestic lives are severed from our
educational and economic activities, commercial agendas take precedence over
the natural world, and profits are prioritized over health. These
dichotomies exist at the expense of women and babies.


We would do well to examine the economic, political and cultural forces
hindering the complete success of something as straightforward and
compelling as breastfeeding.


Kristin Van Tassel is a mother who teaches English at Bethany College in
Lindsborg, Kan., and Kansas Wesleyan University in Salina, Kan. She is a
member of the Prairie Writers Circle at The Land Institute, Salina.


------------------------------------
"The obstacles are ideological rather than political. It is the expression
of patriarchal thought that permeates everything, that makes for a one-sided
vision of society ... Not only is there tremendous ignorance of a feminist
agenda, but when it is addressed it is addressed paternalistically,
condescendingly, in welfare terms. We are lacking in
profound and serious reflection on the subject." -Sofia Montenegro,
Nicaragua


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