New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and state officials are
pushing initiatives aimed at encouraging new mothers to breastfeed their
babies, drawing criticism from some parents who say officials are interfering
with their health choices.
State health commissioners announced on Tuesday that letters
highlighting the importance of breastfeeding were being sent to hospitals,
reminding them of regulations limiting unnecessary formula feedings for
breastfed newborns.
The state initiative coincides with Bloomberg's call for hospitals
to lock away their baby formula and have nurses encourage new mothers to
breastfeed.
Under the mayor's plan, slated to start September 3, the city will
keep a record of the number of bottles that hospitals stock and use. Formula
would be signed out like medication.
The pro-breastfeeding campaign has drawn the ire of some women who
argue it stigmatizes infant formula and interferes with a mother's choice of
what to feed her child.
A number of the city's other health initiatives -- including
cracking down on large-sized sodas and banning smoking in public places -- have
attracted similar criticism from those who accuse the mayor of creating a
"nanny" state.
"I breastfed both of my kids and it took me a good three weeks
before I figured it out," said Rene Syler, who wrote about the issue on
her website Goodenoughmother.com. "I can't imagine what it must be like to
be in the hospital with someone sort of standing over your shoulder and lecturing
you every time you ask for a bottle to feed your crying baby."
Under current regulations, hospitals are only allowed to provide
formula to infants who have an indicated medical reason and a doctor's order
for the supplemental feedings, the state health department said in a statement.
Still, only 39.7 percent of newborn infants in New York are
exclusively breastfed -- well below the federal government goal of 70 percent,
the state health department said. Roughly half of breastfed infants received
supplemental formula in the hospital.
"We recognize that there are women that won't be able to
breastfeed or chose to not breastfeed for a variety of reasons and that is a
choice they should be able to make," said Dr. Barbara Wallace, the state
health department's director of chronic disease prevention.
The state health department said the benefits of breastfeeding
included fewer episodes of acute respiratory illnesses, inner-ear infections
and gastroenteritis.
Mothers who do not breastfeed are at increased risk for postpartum
bleeding and anemia, and have higher rates of breast cancer later in life, the
health department statement said.
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