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Date: | Sun, 18 Sep 2005 18:08:07 -0400 |
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Linda is concerned that participating in the lavish tour and dinner offered
by a breastpump company at the ILCA 2005 conference may have violated one of
our IBLCE Code of Ethics tenets.
I'd say: probably not -- although it may not pass one's personal "smell
test," as clearly it did not for Linda.
The Code requires us to base our practice on current research (Tenet 7), and
to provide information that allows a mom to make an informed decision (Tenet
11), partcularly about products (Tenet 12). But we are also admonished to
"remain free of conflict of interest" while fulfilling one's IBCLC
objectives (Tenet 5).
While the marketing tactics used were similar to those employed by the
pharmaceutical companies (the point of Linda's post), remember that the
breastpump companies are NOT subject to the [WHO] Code of Marketing of
Breast-milk Substititues .... because they don't market breastmilk
substitutes. Tenet 24 of the Code requires IBCLCs to follow the provisions
of the WHO Code that apply to health care workers .... which means we cannot
take any gifts (dinners, pens, mugs, badge holders, etc) from the marketers
of breastmilk substitutes, teats and bottles. (FYI -- they aren't supposed
to be offering it to us, anyway, so it is a "Two-Way No-No").
See www.iblce.org to read all 25 IBLCE Code of Ethics tenets.
Liz Brooks, JD, IBCLC
Wyndmoor, PA, USA
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