Friday, November 22, 2013

BREASTFEEDING IN BAMENDA: EXPERIENCES!!!


This monthly summary is a publication of Prime Lactation Center
 
Ngala Elvis Mbiydzenyuy MAPS MILCA
Lactation Management Specialist
Tel:  (237) 33 11 45 78 or 51 03 02 65

The benefits of breastfeeding to the newborn are not a strange patterned occasional recitation at antenatal care in most clinics in the North West Region of Cameroon. Little is often mentioned of the benefits to the mother and distinction is seldom made between the benefits of breastfeeding and the breast milk. The traditional ANC approach hinging on frequency and not quality of visits gave room for a series of contacts though never effective as 1 in 40 health care workers are trained in breastfeeding counseling or lactation management and support. The one-on-one approach of goal targeted ANC (which admonishes at least 4 to 5 ANC focused visits) leaves us with the questions as to the effectiveness of prenatal breastfeeding education where health care providers are not trained in breastfeeding counseling and management.

Breastfeeding in Cameroon is normative but exclusive breastfeeding is not customary. National statistics from WBTi Cameroon shows that 45% of newborns initiate breastfeeding within 30 minutes to one hour as stipulated in the 10 steps to successful breastfeeding, but only 21% breastfeed till the sixth month without giving water, other fluids and food. From a rural point of view, the unasked question could be answered, as most births occur out of health facilities. In addition cultural taboos surround birth and first feed for infants. What could be the crack in the urban healthcare system to account for such low statistics?

Many problems contribute to the erosion of breastfeeding practices: misinformation, traditional practices, misconception and the unavoidable demerits of changing times. One of them is the detrimental fragmentation of our traditional family support system especially in urban areas. Instead of “families with traditional systems in a modern society” we have an improper-sized society in traditional homes. Modernization has changed our family structures, norms, values and attitudes tending families to rely on other institutions and frameworks for social learning. Breastfeeding has lost its place in the ongoing socio-cultural evolutions. Our families have been torn between the gaggling fangs of formula manufacturers and evangelists of modern family structures and norms (themselves being products of a continental exodus). 

Prime Lactation Center has observed a trend of causal factors contributing to these low statistics. The educated mothers invariably tend to discontinue breastfeeding earlier than their illiterate counterparts. This in part can be due to their work schedules, perceived social status and undue fear to have breasts fallen much earlier in their prime. They find it difficult to breastfeed their infants and wean them early.  Some have resorted to what is called the “breastfeeding style”, women tending to maintain specific pattern of the number and duration of feeds per day. In simple, breastfeeding their babies on schedule often less frequent as advisable.

On the other hand breastfeeding has received a poverty image and economically-deprived mothers tend to breastfeed their babies for a longer period. However very few of them practice exclusive breastfeeding, many adhere to predominant feeding, giving their infants water, herbal teas and local feed within weeks or few months after delivery. The guarantee of proper feed preparation is questionable as source of water and kitchen environment are never safe. We will imagine something much dangerous to those who laden their ego with formula for their infants.

In our community breastfeeding outreach, we observed that breastfeeding in the first few days with colostrums is often not initiated or practiced as most births are out of birthing centers and health facilities. The untrained birth attendants, mostly elderly women admonish that the “dirty fluid” as is called be thrown away. To them it is the accumulated waste of several months in the mother’s breast. Breastfeeding initiation is thus often delayed. You may want to imagine the consequence this might have on the health of the infant as the babies are seldom guarded against the non-sterile environment by the active actions of the passive immunity conferred on by colostral antibodies together with the numerous anti-infective proteins therein. Could anything more than this account for the high incident rate of neonatal and infant diarrhea in rural communities in Cameroon? We believe this attitude could be largely a result of the unawareness of the benefits of colostrums. This poverty of knowledge does not leave urbanites out as urban women and to an extend health care workers know they should give colostrums to their babies but the reason and its importance is not known. The cultural environment and practices are also strongholds in this knowledge battle. Widowhood and the birth of a disabled are huge occurrences that deprive newborns of breastfeeding. In widowhood, the mother is often separated from the newborn for certain traditional practices. In the event of these, the newborn is not breastfeed and is given local teas and food. On the other hand if the newborn is a disable, the quick and snappy conclusion is that the child is a witch or wizard. Often the child is starved to death or left to natural forces. A woman came to our center and recounted a similar event that she was advised by her mother-in-law to starve her first child to death when he was born with a cleft palate. That in a way was a push for her to quickly get pregnant with the second child. We are yet to see a condition so misconstrued as epilepsy and breastfeeding. In no way has breastfeeding been discouraged as in mothers with epilepsy.

The reasons for low exclusive breastfeeding statistics does not leave health professionals out of the success equation. Trainings in lactation management and support have barely been organized in years. Most of the messages given by health professionals to breastfeeding mothers are often late, incomplete or contradictory. We have listened to women at the center mention haven being advised to drink alcohol (‘palm wine’) to increase milk flow; breastfeeding in the side-lying position will cause deafness to the child; when nipples are sore, do not breastfeed instead stop until it gets healed; breastfeeding a baby past the age of 2 makes the child dull and sluggish; when your baby has hiccup you can give him water irrespective of the age etc.

We have also noticed that most of the breastfeeding challenges are a spill-over effect of the labor and delivery room practices. These include the indiscriminate use of epidural analgesics and infusions. The latter often increase tissue fluids formation and possible retention, a risk factor for breast engorgement. If this situation meets poor latching and positioning, sore and/or cracked nipples might develop a potent portal for microorganisms, a likely genesis for mastitis. Forcep and/or traumatic delivery, indiscriminate handling of the newborn after delivery for routine medical procedures could also lead to “baby shutdown” thereby slowing breastfeeding initiation. This terrifies anxious first time mothers who resort to alternative feeding most often formula. Cesarean section often has led to separation of mother and child and the introduction of fluids to the baby. Our observations are that it is not the cesarean section that causes the lactational failure but most often the practices and behavior after the operation that adds or aggravates the situation.


It is important to note that Cameroon is a signatory to several international injunctions related to infant nutrition. These include the Innocenti Declaration on the Protection, Promotion and Support of Breastfeeding, Global Strategy for Infant Young Child and Feeding and the International Code of Marketing Breast Milk Substitutes.  National adherence and enforcement are hugely lacking. This together with breastfeeding being branded with a poverty image has given formula companies the opening to use even health care workers to market their products at the slightest mention of low milk supply, engorgement, work or illness. An infant formula promoter (some of them nurses –milk nurses) markets a product saying “this drug stimulates appetite and control fever, vomiting and diarrhea”. He goes further to say “they were designed for infants from one month old”. With sales commission he gave samples and recommended that they be prescribed.  A health worker mentions “even if we stress breastfeeding, it is impossible to do without canned milk because some mothers have difficulty breastfeeding and others don’t have enough milk, some can afford canned milk, the process of expressing is unpleasant, there are no pumps in hospitals, and furthermore, this milk in my hand contains essential amino acids that strengthen the baby’s immune system; it is very similar to mother’s milk”.  A lady went to a health facility and mentioned “I will be going back to work so I want to give my child canned milk”, the professional did not talk to her about the option of expressing and preserving her milk, but prescribed the baby a breast milk substitute showing the mother that sticker and saying “this is good milk, you see the beautiful baby”. Sometimes you don’t tend to blame these workers, they are under-motivated, and the organizations admonishing health systems to ward-off formula companies are never also willing to support breastfeeding advocacy programs leaving these companies their financial prowess and gumption to ride their marketing interest through. Billboards littered around the cities show formula with bold captions and pictures giving the impression that formula are acceptable alternatives to breastfeeding.

No counseling and breastfeeding support is ever given to women who seek the uninformed way out. Informational and educational materials promoting breastfeeding are few and the available ones are often in the hands of health care professionals often in technical language. It is on these bases that Prime Lactation Center, a not-for profit clinical, advocacy educational and research center with a mission to protect, promote and support breastfeeding while helping parents and babies to breastfeed effectively seeks collaborators and support to improve breastfeeding outcomes using varied tools. The traditional community and extended family network of support and information related to breastfeeding is lost at the individual level. Thus to initiate and continue successful breastfeeding the health care system needs new models and approach while providing the mothers information (in local language), motivation, encouragement and confidence in their own ability. We believe the key to best breastfeeding practice is continued day-to-day support for the breastfeeding mother within her home and community. This ties strongly and timely with this year’s World Breastfeeding Week theme, Breastfeeding Support: Close to mothers. Striving to create mother-to-mother support groups in the region and hopefully the nation at large is the prime focus of this center together with developing advocacy strategies and tools (short documentaries, videos, radio call-in programs, bill board adverts, and relevant literature for pregnant and nursing mothers). Incorporating men in what we call “Real Men Support Breastfeeding” team is a foreseeable goal. Most doors we have knocked for support in the nation are more focused on HIV and AIDS

Following a public survey we conducted in Bamenda the capital of the North West region on “public perception on breastfeeding in public” has illuminated and broadened our scope on the evolution of the breastfeeding practices in our contemporary cultural, social and religious settings. A majority of nursing mothers beckon the creation of hygienic, clean water available walk-in breastfeeding spots in the city. This is a view we hope to achieve with support from stakeholders.

Situational analysis and statistics that might startle you about breastfeeding in Cameroon:
  • 40% breastfeeding initiation rate within ½ - 1 hour after delivery
  • 21% exclusive breastfeeding rates (MICS, 2006)
  • 1 in 40 health care professionals have received lactation management and support training 
  • 75% bottle feeding rates with artificial milk (Ministry of Public Health)
  • No hospital in Cameroon is baby friendly (WBTi Cameroon, 2009)
  • Under five mortality rate in Cameroon is 136 deaths per 100 live births (IGME 2011)

The Center in the months ahead with the availability of funds the seminar hopes to bring together experts to address the impact of labor and delivery room practices and procedures on breastfeeding initiation and duration. Key issues to address will include: review of current maternity services breastfeeding policies; update knowledge and build health care professional capacity on: Labor and delivery room protocols: reviews and recommendations; Cesarean section: skin-to-skin care, Infant separation and breastfeeding initiation


Our desire is to have Cameroon's breastfeeding statistics changed with mothers having the full support.

We solicit organizations that we can work with to establish these mother-to-mother support groups across the nation.

No comments: