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breastmilk
noun
Alternative spelling of breast milk
Exact(47)
Likewise, mothers will go to greater lengths to avoid the harm a lack of breastmilk might inflict than to secure the benefits breastfeeding can bring.
The original version of the adverts warned that, without breastmilk, children ran a heightened risk of leukaemia, diabetes and respiratory diseases.
Why start now?) Infant-formula makers objected, arguing that the adverts should stick to the benefits of breastmilk, rather than the dangers of not breastfeeding.How information is framed matters.
The Guardian reports that the baby developed gastroenteritis within a week of arriving at the camp after her mother's breastmilk failed due to stress and she could not tolerate the formula she was given.
Campaigners claim Nestlé is still breaking the World Health Organisation code for marketing breastmilk substitutes by promoting its formula milk in the developing world.
At 52, she wears her chestnut hair in an ageless ponytail and bangs, dressing in long denim skirts — the better to get spit up on — and cruises the borough with a "got breastmilk?" bumper sticker on her minivan.
Breastmilk is less sweet than formula milk – and both the milk itself and the way the baby feeds may help in developing healthy eating patterns.
Similar(4)
Meanwhile south-north co-operation is gradually growing – in Brazil recently I heard how advanced breastmilk-bank technology was being shared with Portugal and Spain.
The risks of bottlefeeding remain breastmilk protects infants from all manner of other infections and so does the cost.Moreover, in even the most heavily infected areas, 70% of mothers do not carry the virus and, for them, breastfeeding is still by far the best option.
But blaming those deaths on a nefarious alliance of doctors and infant-food manufacturers, as has become commonplace, seems both unfair and unduly influenced by later twentieth-century scandals (most infamously, Nestlé's deadly peddling of infant formula in Africa and elsewhere, which led, in 1981, to the landmark International Code for Marketing Breastmilk Substitutes).
The baby has no vested interests and is not susceptible to the lure of corporate America, aside from the powerful nappy lobby and the Breastmilk Industrial Complex.
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