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Date: | Wed, 30 Jul 2008 08:12:51 +1000 |
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Hi Virginia,
I thought that the clip was pretty good.
It is most unfortunate IMO however, that whenever breastfeeding advocates
are interviewed on informal milk sharing they feel the need to overblow the
risk and give the impression that human milk is a dangerous, disease-ridden
substance. It's this sort of thing that results in hospital staff wanting
biohazard stickers on stored milk and daycare staff refusing to feed
breastfed babies and mothers and others feeling that human milk is "dirty,"
like faeces. Yes, there are risks but they are small and they are manageable
and women are capable of making their own decisions. Why can't someone say
that! No need to make breastfeeding any more suspect than it already is!
It would also be appropriate to make the point that there are significant
risks associated with using infant formula.
Karleen Gribble
Australia
----- Original Message -----
From: "vgthorley" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:40 PM
Subject: Re: GMA Cross Nursing clip (sharing breastfeeding)
The article from Good Morning America talked about a list of infections that
is somewhat dated. The old concerns were transmission of syphilis and
tuberculosis. In my country (Australia), syphilis has been screened for in
the routine pregnancy blood tests for generations, and continues today,
though most mothers are unaware of this. Pulmonary TB was screened for in a
national chest x-ray campaign from (about) 1950, depending on the State, and
was discontinued after about 30 years when very few new cases were
identified. Thus, mothers in the 1970s and erly 1980s, at the start of the
years covered in my new study, had very little risk of transmission of these
diseases when sharing breastfeeding or EBM with another healthy woman.
Since then, new cases of TB are apparently related to immigration or
refugees.
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