I used to work in a hospital with a large Spanish population , and many of the couples spoke No English at all, Since I don't either, I wondered and worried what to do when the so called breastfeeding mothers almost universally wanted to give formula the first day, and then would be out the door. We lined up translators to help with encouraging moms to give colostrum right away. If they were unavailable, we spoke with them the best we could and encouraged baby to breast-Many moms seemed very modest, and did not want to breastfeed around staff plus there were usually many family members all crowded in the room. They continued to say NO LECHE, and did not seem to know that colostrum was LECHE! We also had a Kitty Franz video and a Medela Spanish video which we would show, and ordered in bulk a nice pamphlet from LLL, color, with pictures of Spanish nursing moms. On page 5 it says,No le des otra leche, Ni agua, Ni te, ni chupon. (no other milk, no water, no tea, no pacifierss, and has a picture of all these item crossed out. It also explains aabout the calostro, saying it is the first food and is all that is necessary for the baby. We liked it a lot and the mothers seemed to as well. This pamphlet is #95SP, and is less expensive ordered in bulk. Hope this helps. The interesting thing, is that frequently even if the baby got bottles early, they seemed to be able to go to breast anyhow later and we didn't see much "nipple confusion". Ann Calandro