Today I had a conversation with a friend who is in her 50s about breastfeeding her four children, who were born over approximately a 15 year period. She said with her first, she didn’t breastfeed at all. With her second, she breastfed for a month. And with her third and fourth, born 22 months apart, she breastfed each for a year — and was sad to stop.
What made the difference with her last two? She said that noone breastfed when she had her first, there was no support. By the time the last two came, breastfeeding was acceptable if not embraced. Breastfeeding in the US is increasingly embraced but breast milk substitutes are still being given to almost half of US babies by day 7, according to the CDC.
Thinking about this conversation about social context, it is clear that society drives what is acceptable/good when it comes to breastfeeding and birth.
In the US C-sections (often scheduled) are de rigeur among celebrities, thus they are regarded by US Weekly fans everywhere as a preferred choice. The role of midwives is misunderstood, thus they are not sought out. Birth is seen as dangerous and excruciating and voices opposing this media-driven view are drowned out. Breast milk and formula are both regarded by many as equally nutritious, with formula having advantages like “baby is more full and sleeps better.”
One of my fears is that our views of maternal health will be exported to the developing world. It has already begun in the areas of c-section and breastfeeding.
C-section rates in the developing world are on the rise. One study by Belizan et al comments:
Although the epidemic of caesarean section in Latin America is not new,6 little action is taking place to reduce its use. This is partly because caesarean section is now culturally accepted as a normal way of giving birth.23
Breast milk substitutes are being pushed on populations with neither the money nor the clean water nor the need for them. Laos is one example where the population has historically had high levels of breastfeeding, but influxes of breast milk substitutes are changing the situation. This 2010 study by Barennes et al finds:
In Laos, mothers with the highest socio-economic status are showing a tendency to give up breastfeeding. Successful educational strategies and advocacy measures should be urgently developed to promote and sustain breastfeeding in developing countries.
Women in the third world need many things: among them community health workers, midwives, medicine, emergency care and supplies. However, importing our flawed views of breastfeeding and birthing will not save lives. Instead, practical solutions need to be found on the ground, where C-sections and milk substitutes are reserved for medically necessary conditions.
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