To the Executive Officer, Superior Court
I understand that a family court services mediator recently made a
recommendation that a lactating woman initiate use of an artificial
breastmilk substitute in the event that the mother continued to be
unable to physically meet the her ex-partner’s demands for milk
expression. This is not the first time I have had a complaint of this
nature from my clients who have participated in mediation through Family
Services, and so I am responding in writing this time.
As a board-certified health care professional, and as [blank county's]
Lactation Consultant, I would like to help clarify the medical and legal
problems with the mediator’s recommendation. All professional health and
medical groups who have a published position on infant feeding recognize
breastfeeding as the only physiological source of milk in an infant’s
diet, and that any and all artificial substitutes pose a risk to the
infant’s short-term and long-term health. Because of the economic and
health implications, and the individual’s right to choose the safest
method of infant feeding, the State of California has made it clear that
breastfeeding--and being breastfed--constitute civil rights under the
law. The United States government is signatory to two international
documents stating that breastfeeding, and being breastfed, are human
rights. A mediator cannot simply set these rights aside; nor should she
make a clinical recommendation to substitute non-physiological methods
of nutrition. As an infant feeding specialist, I am careful not to
recommend use of a breastmilk substitute unless there is a medical
emergency, because of the risks to both mother and child. Breastfeeding
provides not only nutrition, but protection, and every child deserves
that protection.
Many women are willing and able to produce and make available extra milk
so that others can temporarily take over their role in their absence.
Some women are willing, but unable. No one may insist that a woman make
herself physically able to do that which she cannot. No one may insist
that a woman allow a risky substitute to be given if she herself chooses
a safer course for her child. She is breastfeeding successfully; this
ensures her child normal health, wellness, and happiness. Anything else
is not normal, and thus less than adequate.
If the mother has concerns over the father’s ability to meet her and her
child’s needs for breastfeeding in a timely and respectful manner, then
that is where the mediator’s work begins. As a society, we cannot afford
to continue to act in such an uninformed way about the importance of
breastfeeding to the physical and emotional health and the economic
welfare of women, their children, and our community. A woman who
participates in mediation has a right to the reasonable expectation that
the court will offer support and protection for breastfeeding, rather
than an uneducated dismissal of her needs as having neither importance
nor basis in reality.
I would like to hear that the mediator has amended her recommendations
to reflect this new understanding. I hope this will help Family Court
Services implement a policy which promotes, supports and protects
breastfeeding.
Arly Helm, MS, IBCLC
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