this was a Letter to Editor from
http://www.trumanindex.com/
Thought it would be interesting to share,
Karen Querna
Spokane,WA USA
Breast milk situation could be closely tied to HIV infections
Issue date: 12/7/06 Section: Letters
Forgive me if I am emotional, but we are facing a crisis and
humanitarian disaster here in South Africa, and you would have to have a
heart of steel not to become emotional.
Let me give you some figures so you have a better understanding of our
situation: 40 percent of the pregnant women in our province are HIV
positive. Forty percent of deaths in the 15 to 49 year olds were AIDS
related in 2000. One million children are orphaned because of AIDS in
2006. Two million children will be orphaned in South Africa by 2010.
Many families are headed by children, some as young as 10 years old,
because both parents have died.
Because of the infection rate among our pregnant women, the pool of
women to draw donor mothers from is not large. Our breast-feeding rates
are not high in this country. There has been very aggressive marketing
of infant formula, and the spillover effect from HIV on breast feeding
has taken its toll.
Many of the mothers who do breast feed stop at about four to five months
when they return to work (a huge concern, and I am looking into this for
my Master's). We believe that the promotion of milk banking goes hand in
hand with the promotion and protection of breast feeding, something we
are working hard on. But even if every breast-feeding mother in this
country donated breast milk, we would never have enough to feed all the
orphans who need it.
I read the article Lynn referred to about shipping milk to Africa and
would like to comment on some issues - quotes from the article in brackets:
"Wet nursing, when a woman comes in and nurses other people's babies, is
more culturally acceptable in African cultures, she said."
Wet nursing is a positively dangerous practice given the HIV infection
rate and the fact that the majority of people do not know their HIV
status (apart from the danger of passing on many other diseases that are
rife in Africa).
"It smacks a little of racism," it said.
I can assure you that when babies are dying, no one is stopping to ask
about whether the milk came from a white Western woman or a local
African woman. Breastmilk is breastmilk, no matter what the source. We
are dealing with a crisis of monumental proportions. There is no room
for racism here.
"Carter said plenty of African women can donate their breast milk. She
said she thinks that instead of spending money trying to keep breast
milk frozen and ship it across an ocean, Americans should send money to
support African milk banks."
New milk banks in Africa would be wonderful. The reality is, all the
money in the world could not buy the amount of breastmilk that is needed
for millions of orphaned babies.
What we are doing is helping a very few of these babies, the tip of the
iceberg. They are the fortunate ones. If you could see these sick babies
who arrive at our home, very ill. The one I am thinking of particularly
had TB, was HIV positive, was covered in eczema and was skin and bone.
It was like a miracle before our eyes once he has put on the breastmilk
and treatment, the eczema cleared, his diarrhea stopped, and he started
to gain weight. Today, he is a happy, healthy 4-year-old who is on HAART
treatment and has been adopted by a loving family. He was on breast milk
for 18 months, and it made a enormous difference to his life. And so I
could go on. Our latest was a baby who was abandoned at 10 months. When
she arrived she was well dressed and well cared for. Sadly, she is HIV
positive.
My heart goes out to her mother. How hard it must have been to abandon a
child she obviously loved and cared for, possibly because she was too
ill to care for her anymore. Many thousands in this country who are HIV
positive still do not have access to Anti Retroviral Treatment and are
dying from AIDS as a result.
Jill Youse and others have cared enough to do something to help, the
benefit of the raised awareness of breastfeeding and milk banking
internationally and locally is substantial.
I understand the sentiment that to spend money shipping milk out to
Africa is not a good use of resources. But then I look into the eyes of
one of these precious babies who deserve the very best chance in life,
and I find my heart rules my head, and I cannot say don't send us any
more milk. The reality is, it will save lives.
Please, I beg of you, be gracious and walk a mile with us in our shoes
before you cast the first stone.
As far as the International Breastmilk Project is concerned:
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can
change the world; indeed it is the only thing that ever has." - Margaret
Mead
Penny Reimers, RN.RM. B.Tech (Nursing) IBCLC Coordinator iThemba Lethu
Breast Milk Bank
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