The Commissioner for Health, Lagos
State, Dr. Jide Idris, has stated that women who breastfeed their babies
frequently are less prone to ovarian and breast cancer, as well as
diabetes later in their life.
He said the health benefits of exclusive
breastfeeding for the recommended period in a child’s life was not only
beneficial to the child, but could improve the mother’s health, as well
as prevent certain health issues in both mother and child.
Idris, who spoke during the
commemoration of the 2016 World Breastfeeding Week, also noted that
breastfeeding could help in child spacing, such that the mother would
recover fully from childbirth before having another pregnancy, which he
noted would also help the child as well to develop properly. “
He said children who were exclusively
breastfed have higher immunity, higher intelligence quotient, as well as
becoming better adults in life, adding that breast milk has antibodies
that protects children against infection. “Also, children who get
exclusive breast milk have lower chances of getting obese,” the
commissioner added.
On his part, the Special Adviser to
Governor Akinwunmi Ambode on Primary Health Care (PHC), Dr. Olufemi
Onanuga, said only 28 per cent of mothers in Lagos exclusively
breastfeed their new babies for at least six months, adding that 72 per
cent of mothers in Lagos were not observing the healthy practise.
Onanuga said exclusive breastfeeding and
adequate complementary feeding were part of the key interventions for
improving child survival and had the potential of saving about 20 per
cent of under five children from morbidity and mortality. According to
him, about 50–60 per cent of under-five mortality cases were largely due
to malnutrition, caused by poor breastfeeding practices and inadequate
complementary feeding.
While observing that the national
percentage was way lower, at 17 per cent of exclusive breastfeeding
rate, he said that of Lagos, which is 28 per cent must be increased,
hence the need for more awareness on the benefit of the practise.
He said in Lagos, “statistics has shown
that only 22.6 per cent of children were breastfed within one day of
birth while 25.9 per cent of children born in Lagos State were breastfed
appropriately, (2013 MICS 4). The practice of exclusive breastfeeding
in the first six months of life and the introduction of adequate
complementary diet till the first two years of life are integral part to
child survival and optimal growth. Our future is in our hands which can
be guaranteed with the provision of adequate diet to children for
optimal brain growth,” he
said.
said.
The special adviser said it was for this
reason that the state government institutionalised the extension of the
maternity leave to six months and also introduced two weeks paternity
leave, adding that wise nursing mothers were expected to make effective
use of this long holiday to exclusively breastfeed their babies.
He said the objectives of the 2016 Breastfeeding Week included sensitising the public
that the provision of adequate nutrition for children at all age groups was the first step towards the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG); firmly anchoring breastfeeding as a key component of sustainable development; galvanising a variety of actions at all levels of breastfeeding in the new era of the SDGs and engaging and collaborating with a wider range of actors around the promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding.
that the provision of adequate nutrition for children at all age groups was the first step towards the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG); firmly anchoring breastfeeding as a key component of sustainable development; galvanising a variety of actions at all levels of breastfeeding in the new era of the SDGs and engaging and collaborating with a wider range of actors around the promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding.
“Collectively, we must ensure the
survival of our children to guaranty our tomorrow. The efforts of this
administration are geared towards the promotion of maternal and child
survival strategies,” he said. He said to celebrate the week, the state
government lined up a number of activities, including creation of public
awareness on the importance of exclusive breastfeeding, among others.
