| 17 Avril 2018
11 APRIL 2018 | GENEVA - WHO and UNICEF today issued  new ten-step guidance to increase support for breastfeeding in health  facilities that provide maternity and newborn services. Breastfeeding  all babies for the first 2 years would save the lives of more than 820  000 children under age 5 annually.
 
 The Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding underpin the Baby-friendly  Hospital Initiative, which both organizations launched in 1991. The  practical guidance encourages new mothers to breastfeed and informs  health workers how best to support breastfeeding.
 
 Breastfeeding is vital to a child’s lifelong health, and reduces costs  for health facilities, families, and governments. Breastfeeding within  the first hour of birth protects newborn babies from infections and  saves lives. Infants are at greater risk of death due to diarrhoea and  other infections when they are only partially breastfed or not breastfed  at all. Breastfeeding also improves IQ, school readiness and  attendance, and is associated with higher income in adult life. It also  reduces the risk of breast cancer in the mother.
 
 "Breastfeeding saves lives. Its benefits help keep babies healthy in  their first days and last will into adulthood," says UNICEF Executive  Director Henrietta H. Fore. "But breastfeeding requires support,  encouragement and guidance. With these basic steps, implemented  properly, we can significantly improve breastfeeding rates around the  world and give children the best possible start in life."
 
 WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says that in many  hospitals and communities around the world, whether a child can be  breastfed or not can make the difference between life and death, and  whether a child will develop to reach his or her full potential.
 
 "Hospitals are not there just to cure the ill. They are there to  promote life and ensure people can thrive and live their lives to their  full potential," says Dr Tedros. "As part of every country’s drive to  achieve universal health coverage, there is no better or more crucial  place to start than by ensuring the Ten Steps to Successful  Breastfeeding are the standard for care of mothers and their babies."
 
 The new guidance describes practical steps countries should take to  protect, promote and support breastfeeding in facilities providing  maternity and newborn services. They provide the immediate health system  platform to help mothers initiate breastfeeding within the first hour  and breastfeed exclusively for six months.
 
 It describes how hospitals should have a written breastfeeding policy  in place, staff competencies, and antenatal and post-birth care,  including breastfeeding support for mothers. It also recommends limited  use of breastmilk substitutes, rooming-in, responsive feeding, educating  parents on the use of bottles and pacifiers, and support when mothers  and babies are discharged from hospital.
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2018/promote-breastfeeding-globally/en/