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US hospitals pressured to end free baby formula

New parents leaving US hospitals often take home a corporate gift along with their babies: a tote bag filled with infant formula. Consumer advocates want to end the giveaways, which they say undermine breast feeding.

In a letter to more than 2,600 hospitals, dozens of consumer and health organisations called on the facilities to stop distributing free samples of formula that they say entangles healthcare providers in pharmaceutical and food manufacturers' marketing and could be seen as an endorsement.

Giving formula to new parents discourages some new mothers from breast feeding, the groups said in the letter sent by the advocacy group Public Citizen. They are also petitioning the $4 billion infant formula industry's leaders - Abbott Laboratories, Mead Johnson Nutrition Co and Nestle SA - to halt the practise.

Hospitals aim "to promote the health of infants and mothers, but the ongoing promotion of infant formula conflicts with this mission," Public Citizen President Robert Weissman wrote in the letter to hospital chief executives.

Boost rates of breast feeding

The move is part of a renewed effort to boost US rates of breast feeding, which is known to confer a wide range of health benefits from reducing obesity to boosting immunity and is recommended for at least a baby's first six months of life.

Formula makers and hospitals defend the free samples, saying they are meeting women's needs.

Just 14% of 6-month-old infants are exclusively breast fed, something US health officials want to increase to about 26% by 2020. Breast feeding also lags among lower-income women, according to the government data.

Still, breast feeding in the United States is increasing, according to the World Health Organization, partly because more hospitals offer breast feeding support and allow babies to stay in their mothers' hospital rooms.

About 66% of hospitals still give away formula, a 2009 Centres for Disease Control and Prevention report released last year found, down from nearly 73% in 2007.

Often the practise involves a corporate-sponsored tote bag from a formula company filled with samples of their product along with diapers, pamphlets and other items. Samples are often also mailed to people's homes along with coupons for more.

'More information, not less’

The industry's trade group said such samples had been given away for more than 40 years and that most women wanted the bags.

"We can't forget that some moms even though they plan to breast feed, they either can't or they decide not to," said International Formula Council Executive Vice President Mardi Mountford. "We believe they want more information, not less."

The consumer and health groups said in their letter that a hospital's involvement could sway women and that giving away formula samples worked against their other efforts.

Rather than promoting breast feeding, the packages of formula could encourage women to give up nursing their infants instead of seeking help and support, the groups said.

Hospitals stop formula giveaways

Once the free samples are gone, families also end up spending between R6 300 and R22 000 a year on formula, they added.

Some hospitals have already stopped formula giveaways, and a few states and cities have banned the practise.

The American Hospital Association, in a statement, said its member’s drafted policies based on mothers' preferences and that while breast feeding was best, "having information and resources available for mothers who choose not to breast feed is a responsible and supportive approach for the hospital."

Representatives for Abbott, Mead Johnson and Nestle did not immediately return requests for comment.

(Susan Heavey, Reuters Health, April 2012) 

Read more:

Formula-fed babies don't always overeat

Breastfeeding

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