Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Hapy World BREASTmilkFEEDING WEEK

SOURCE:http://www.fox23.com/news/local/story/Tulsa-Health-Department-celebrates-World/qOVxx6oRUkuIUIjOEMt3bw.cspx

Tulsa Health Department celebrates World Breastfeeding week

Updated: 8/06 11:39 amPublished: 8/06 11:38 am


In celebration of World Breastfeeding Week, the Tulsa Health Department will host a reception honoring mothers in the Women, Infants & Children program who choose to breastfeed.

The event will be held on Friday, August 10th at 11:00 a.m. at the Southwood Baptist Church, located at 10110 East 41st Street in Tulsa. Approximately 100 local women take part in the event each year.

The theme for this year's celebration is Support Breastfeeding: It’s Everyone’s Responsibility, which focuses on the importance of supporting mothers who choose to breastfeed. Supporting breastfeeding is important for mothers and their infants, as well as for employers, the community, and the environment. Every day a mom breastfeeds is one more day of better health for both mom and baby. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends infants receive only human milk (no formula, food, or water) for the first six months of life, with continued breastfeeding and the addition of complimentary foods for up to one year or beyond.
Many women who would like to breastfeed make the decision either not to breastfeed or to wean early, due to their need to return to work. According to recent data from the Oklahoma State Department of Health, 74.6 percent of Oklahoma mothers breastfeed initially, but only 34.9 percent continue to breastfeed for six months or longer. Many women who choose not to breastfeed cite returning to work or school as the reason. Continuing to breastfeed after returning to work can be a challenge for many working mothers, and having a supportive workplace can impact a mother's decision on whether or not to continue to breastfeed throughout her baby's first year
“Workplaces that provide a supportive environment can help ease the stress and help mothers feel good about their decision to combine working and breastfeeding,” said Tulsa Health Department Director Dr. Bruce Dart. “An environment where breastfeeding is supported will encourage women to meet their breastfeeding goals.”

Oklahoma has a program in place to recognize worksites that have met criteria to become breastfeeding friendly. These worksites allow flexible break times and a private location for nursing mothers to express milk, have access to a nearby water source for washing hands and breast pump equipment, and have a written breastfeeding policy.
The Tulsa Health Department has resources to help inform mothers, breastfeeding advocates, health professionals, and the community on how they can actively support mothers to continue to breastfeed for at least the baby’s first year and beyond.

nother article for WBMFW

SOURCE: http://allafrica.com/stories/201208070991.html


Africa: World Breastfeeding Week and the Tshwane Declaration of Support for Breastfeeding in South Africa World Breastfeeding Week Is Celebrated Annually From 1 to 7 August

PRESS RELEASE
The slogan for this year's Breastfeeding Week is "Understanding the past...planning for the future. Celebrating 20 years of BFHI (Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative)"
World Breastfeeding Week celebrates its twentieth anniversary in 2012. This time it focuses on the progress that has been made on the implementation of the Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding which was adopted by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) ten years ago.
Implementing the Global Strategy effectively is essential to increase breastfeeding rates, especially exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months, and to reach Millennium Developmental Goal (MDG) 4, namely to reduce under five mortality by two thirds.
After consultation from WHO and UNICEF, a breastfeeding consultative meeting took place in Tshwane in August 2011. The objectives were to build consensus on policy and programme changes to reflect new evidence on breastfeeding, including in the context of HIV & Aids, identify the critical next steps for South Africa to promote, protect and support breastfeeding as a key child survival strategy, and to mobilise support and commitment to promote, protect and support breastfeeding.
Participants of the National Breastfeeding Consultative Meeting concluded with a declaration known as the "Tshwane Declaration of Support for Breastfeeding" which declared South Africa as a country that will actively promote, protect and support exclusive breastfeeding as a health intervention to optimise child survival, irrespective of the mother's HIV status.
Actions taken thus far:
A Child Health Workshop took place on 30 and 31 July 2012 in Bloemfontein where the implementation of the Tshwane Declaration of Support for Breastfeeding was discussed in detail.
On Friday, 3 August 2012, the Mangaung Mother's Milk Alliance (MMMA) was formed. This meeting was attended by representatives from the public and private sector (paediatricians, dieticians, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists and audiologists, and nurses working at maternity, neonatal, postnatal, paediatric and gastro wards).

some Pro BMF (breastmilkfeeding) articles!

SOURCE: http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/speak-easy-archive/item/42526-do-breastfeeding-mothers-require-further-protection?Itemid=219

Moms in Doylestown have some extra protection against the sideways looks, snide comments and outright harrassment they might experience while breastfeeding in public.
A committee voted on Thursday night to recommend that the Doylestown Borough Council change a local anti-discrimination ordinance to include the accommodation of nursing mothers, according to Doylestown Patch.
Nursing mothers who experience harassment or who are asked to cover up or to leave a public place or business can now file a complaint with the borough for investigation.
Since 2007, Pennsylvania has had a law on the books to protect mothers. The state's Freedom to Breastfeed Act stipulates that a mother may nurse her child in public without being considered a nuisance, and immune to accusations of indecent exposure, sexual conduct or obscenity.

Hi blogosphere!

been awhile! busy busy while momming to M and J. and pumping. and school. and exercising!
we've been getting healthy in this house which means a lot of active time! im down 47 lbs since m was born (17 in the last month alone!) and ive been working to keep up my supply. its been kinda up and down. but im getting it back up :)

here are some pics of me celebrating WORLD BREASTFEEDING WEEK! (i wish i could petition to change it to World BreastMilkFeeding Week to support the EPers and moms who feed with milk donations!) my girl is nearly 6 months old and im still EP for her :) not a drop of any alternative baby milk has touched her tongue! thats a testament to my hard work and my amazing body. im so thankful. shes also not had a single illness in her time on this earth, and neither has my son. ive been sneaking him breastmilk this whole time too and its proven to be beneficial!
Roo at a couple weeks old!

liquid gold :)

almost 6 months old!

the few times she nursed...she ALWAYS did this.



this was my morning yield. i no longer pump in the night and so every morning i marathon it up :) this is 14.5 ounces, which feeds her about 3 normal feedings. about 1-2x a day she'll have a big 6-7 ounce bottle but the rest are about 4-5 ounces :) i love these big morning yields. need to get it back up to this.


tomorrow i head to Portland, Oregon to see a screening of Donor Milk, a new documentary. all the proceeds go to funding the development of the hopeful Portland based Northwest Mothers Milk Bank.

please, if youre so inclined, reach into those pockets and help this milk bank become a reality! the closest one is about 600 miles away (san jose and denver i believe are the closest) and we need some milk for these local babies!
http://www.nwmmb.org/

also, in October i start training to be a peer counselor for breastfeeding mothers in the area surrounding me, which will officially begin my hours dedicated to breastfeeding. i need 1000 before i sit the exam in 2015! :) im excited to bring knowledge of EP and EBF to the table! wish me luck!

anyway, ill update soon. i have some assignments to do!

Thursday, July 5, 2012

just an update

wow! things have been busy! i started summer term last week and have been preparing and studying for exams and assignments in 4 classes!
im currently taking sociology, psychology, medical terminology and weight management. i definitely bit off quite a bit!
in terms of nursing, i wish i could say that things got better and she is on the breast, but that just isnt so. i havent tried in a couple weeks, and the last time i did she laid there with my breast in her mouth and instead of suckling, she just hummed. it was cute, but not at all productive. my supply is still pretty good. it dipped when i got sick, but once i got better i popped a couple days of fenugreek and it got back up. 

my daughter is almost 5 months, and in a few months she will be having some purees and im very excited :) she watches with big eyes as we eat and she ijs so curious! we are watching her cues, and will practice "baby led solids" as much as one can while bottle feeding. im SO proud to say though that my milk has grown this girl from her birth weight of 8#6oz and 20.5 inches to a bouncing 15# and 25 inches! im so proud of it!

i just did a research article for my psych class and i chose a report and small study on handling expressed breastmilk and the breakdown of antioxidants after time and low temp.  ill post the information in another article :) it was very interesting, and it did make me sad that she doesnt always get freshly expressed milk, but its still the healthiest alternative, and contains more antioxidants than formula, so i dont feel too bad :) also, my house got really sick for nearly 3 weeks, and save for a little congestion for a day or so, M didnt get ANY sickness! go Milk!

anyhow. thats all for now.

keep on!