Equity in Breastfeeding

  • Pérez-Escamilla R
  • Sellen D
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Abstract

Provision of accessible, high-quality, best-practice support for all people who want to breastfeed is a sound investment by society at large. 1-4 As our basic scientific knowledge has grown, the evidence that justifies such investments now extends beyond the powerful breastfeeding protection against infectious diseases in early childhood to include pro-tection against the development of chronic diseases in later adulthood. In addition, breastfeeding also offers protection to the mother against the risks of breast and ovarian cancer, hypertension, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. 2 As a result, effective interventions to improve breastfeeding out-comes are highly cost-effective. 2-4 The evidence for the health and economic benefits of breastfeeding to families and society as a whole is now so strong that access to breastfeeding protection and support has also been framed as a human right with issues of social justice and equity becoming paramount. 5 Social justice in breastfeeding requires fair access for all to the multilevel intersectoral infrastructure needed to protect, promote and support breastfeeding so that individuals, families and soci-ety can partake in the numerous benefits derived from breast-feeding. 6,7 Breastfeeding equity requires the involvement and participation of all people and stakeholder institutions in the support and benefits derived from breastfeeding, regard-less of income, ethnicity, education, religion, country of ori-gin, gender, sexual identity, and age, among many other dimensions of diversity within populations. Put differently, any social, economic, political, legal, or biomedical factors that prevent women from implementing their choice and right to breastfeed can be framed as a fundamental social injustice that needs to be understood through an equity lens. As this " Equity in Breastfeeding " special issue indicates, identifying inequities in access to support for breastfeeding and finding effective ways to address them needs to move to the forefront of global and local research, policy and advo-cacy agendas. Health practitioners and civil society are becoming more aware of the unique health benefits that breastfeeding offers throughout the entire life course. Yet, huge disparities in breastfeeding indicators have emerged both within and between countries 1,6-10 which require urgent analysis and action to reduce. Improving breastfeeding mat-ters because of its enormous value in building human and social capital, health and social well being. Emerging breast-feeding equity issues challenge us to reflect on the pressing need for better strategies to ensure the benefits of breastfeed-ing are accessible to all through equitable support and knowledge exchange and translation. The contributions in this special issue collectively shed light on key equity dimen-sions and provide diverse examples of the power of an " equity lens " in framing the issues, identifying barriers to breastfeeding that demand action, and map the evidence base into dynamic multilevel systems frameworks such as the breastfeeding gear model. 7 This model calls for highly inte-grated and well-coordinated evidence-based advocacy, polit-ical will, legislation, funding, human capacity formation, breastfeeding promotion, and research and evaluation for large-scale breastfeeding programs to work for all.

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APA

Pérez-Escamilla, R., & Sellen, D. (2015). Equity in Breastfeeding. Journal of Human Lactation, 31(1), 12–14. https://doi.org/10.1177/0890334414561062

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