Most recent news stories

Corporate Voices Toolkit Illustrates Perils of Conflicts of Interest

May 7, 2011

Last month, the non-profit group Corporate Voices for Working Families released an updated version of its worksite lactation toolkit, initially released in 2009. Again working with Working Mother Media, the toolkit “is made possible by the generous support of Abbott Nutrition,” makers of Similac infant formula. Corporate Voices also thanks Abbott for serving as a critical reviewer of the content of the toolkit.

The toolkit provides an excellent illustration of what happens when well-meaning organizations partner with the formula industry, potentially tarnishing their own credibility and hard-earned reputation. Research has already shown that when formula companies provide information on breastfeeding, mothers who use that material are more likely to use formula.

Yet, in its most egregious flaw, the toolkit repeatedly refers users to Abbott’s materials on breastfeeding, including a pamphlet they produced, their hotline and their website. There is also plenty of inaccurate information in their other materials in the toolkit.

The influence of the formula industry may be too subtle to be readily apparent to the average user, including editorial staff at Corporate Voices.

What is most notable about the toolkit are the many things that it doesn’t say. For example, the toolkit contains long lists of resources, many of which are well respected, but nowhere does it mention the federal government’s Business Case For Breastfeeding, a competing worksite toolkit that is evidence-based and has no commercial bias. It also does not highlight the National Business Group on Health’s worksite material, which is also well respected.

In its main brochure, the Corporate Voices toolkit describes the health benefits to infants such as reduced ear infections, diarrhea and colic. But it fails to mention any more scary or serious conditions such as hospitalization for lower respiratory tract infection, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, obesity, and diabetes. There is little risk to the formula industry to concede milder diseases of infancy that most of the public knows about anyway.

When the toolkit’s main brochure discusses the “benefits” of maternal health, it mentions only breast cancer, cervical cancer, and weight loss. These latter two conditions are without a strong evidence base, and are not included the 2007 Agency for Health Care Research and Quality analysis of breastfeeding data. Other serious maternal diseases that are in the AHRQ report go unmentioned: ovarian cancer and type 2 diabetes, for example.

The toolkit features many common but subtle problems often seen when the formula industry produces materials on breastfeeding such as:

  • Repeatedly describing only the “benefits” of breastfeeding, and never referring to the risks of not breastfeeding. Breastfeeding is the biologically normal way babies are fed; to describe the “benefits” of breastfeeding implies that formula is the normal way babies are fed.
  • Using superlative language to describe breastfeeding or breastmilk such as “best” or “optimal,” knowing that most people will settle for “good enough” or “average” and the ideal or optimal products are often beyond the reach or desire of the average person.
  • Overemphasizing how difficult breastfeeding can be—focusing on mothers’ struggles, pain, guilt, leaky breasts, etc. Included in this category are materials that emphasize the different kinds of equipment a mother “needs” in order to breastfeed: creams, pads, cover-ups, pumps, special clothing, etc.
  • Using language above the reading level recommended for health literacy when producing educational materials for the general public. Health literacy experts recommend that materials be written at a sixth grade level. Materials written at sixth grade reading level have short simple sentences, without the need for commas.
  • Using subtle language to ensure formula feeding mothers are included in all breastfeeding initiatives, as was illustrated in a letter from an Ohio representative to the Surgeon General included in the toolkit, predating the Surgeon General’s release of her Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding. The representative asks that the Call to Action be “balanced and supportive of all mothers,” and “improve the nutritional well being of all infants in this nation.”
  • Failure to mention more serious diseases associated with early cessation of breastfeeding, and only mentioning more minor risks that are already commonly known.

Aside from referring mothers and providers to Abbott materials, the toolkit includes many videos purporting to give tips on breastfeeding. Again, what is important is what is not included. Many of the videos are amateur productions by ordinary mothers with no particular expertise in breastfeeding, and they have little practical information about how to pump at work, or how to breastfeed and some even have overt misinformation. It is concerning that an organization with such resources as Corporate Voices would ignore any number of well-made professional resources in favor of amateur videos that provide little actual support.

Finally, there is almost no mention of the effect of introduction of formula on mother’s milk supply or her ability to breastfeed. Readers may be especially confused because well-respected material is included with obvious formula marketing material, making the entire package appear more credible than it really is.

Conflicts of interest are rife in the health care field, and that is why a growing number of academic medical centers are minimizing their faculties’ relationships with pharmaceutical and device makers. Increasingly, well-meaning doctors and administrators are learning that there is “No Free Lunch”. It is time that well-meaning non-profits learn the same lesson.

Non-profit organizations must be careful not to enter into agreements with any corporation whose activities compromise their own mission and policies. A non-profit interested in children’s health should not be entering into financial relationships with tobacco companies or makers of sugar-sweetened beverages, for example.

These corporations cannot be expected to compromise their bottom line for a good cause—their own shareholders would not stand for it. Thus, true promotion of breastfeeding will only hurt Abbott’s sales. However, a skillful manipulation of a worksite lactation program may actually help its sales, or at least ensure the sales are not negatively impacted. Abbott is well aware that the only way to sell more formula is to sell less breastfeeding. Corporate Voices has partnered with them at its own peril.

Abbott’s support of the Corporate Voices toolkit is not “generosity,” but a sensible marketing investment for its formula products. The result: Corporate Voices appears to be no more than a foolish pawn in Abbott’s greater marketing scheme, and not a good citizen legitimately trying to help working mothers and their employers.

Joint Letter asks Congress for money for breastfeeding

March 10, 2011

On March 7, a Joint Letter went to Congress signed by over 120 organizations, asking for $15 million from the Prevention and Public Health Fund for for breastfeeding in Fiscal Year 2012.

Sponsored by the US Breastfeeding Committee (USBC), people are now urged to meet with, or write their legislators to follow up on this letter and emphasize that this funding is important to them.

We want folks to CALL their own Senators and members of Congress, especially. If they can’t call, they should write/fax (preferably not email but email is better than nothing). Note that legislators are unlikely to be receptive to contact from people outside their districts, so focus on your own legislators.

Surgeon General launches Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding

January 20, 2011

Washington, DC–In front of a packed audience today, US Surgeon General Regina Benjamin launched the first ever Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding.

Members of the US Breastfeeding Committee flanking Surgeon General Regina Benjamin at the launch of the Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding

The 88 page document focuses on the landscape surrounding mothers and families and the infrastructure needed to give women the support they require to meet their own breastfeeding goals. The report emphasizes that breastfeeding is not only about public health, but has important psychosocial, environmental and economic impacts. In her remarks today, Dr. Benjamin emphasized the importance of exclusive breastfeeding for six months and the need to eliminate disparities in breastfeeding rates, especially among African-American mothers. The report is available at the Surgeon General’s website, surgeongeneral.gov.

The document enumerates twenty action steps to improve US breastfeeding initiation, duration and exclusivity rates, each with sub-actions. Among the recommendations are the following:

  • “Accelerate the implementation of the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative” (part of Action 4)
  • “Ensure that marketing of infant formula is conducted in a way that minimizes its negative impacts on exclusive breastfeeding” (Action 6). This includes:
    • “hold[ing] marketers of infant formula accountable for complying with the International Code of Marketing of Breast-Milk Substitutes” and “ensur[ing] that health care clinicians do not serve as advertisers for infant formula.”
  • “Establish and incorporate minimum requirements for competency in lactation care into health professional credentialing, licensing, and certification processes.”
  • “Ensure around-the-clock access to resources that provide assistance with breastfeeding.” (part of Action 4)
  • “Ensure access to services provided by International Board Certified Lactation Consultants” (Action 11), including efforts to “provide reimbursement for IBCLCs independent of their having other professional certification or licensure.”
  • “Work toward establishing paid maternity leave for all employed mothers” (Action 13)
  • “Expand the use of programs in the workplace that allow lactating mothers to have direct access to their babies” (Action 15).

The document also calls for the formation of an Interagency Work Group focused on breastfeeding promotion and support in the federal government.

As part of the CTA, the Surgeon General’s Office also produced a filmed Public Service Announcement to distribute to media outlets.

“Remember, everyone can help make breastfeeding easier for moms,” said Dr. Benjamin today.

The Call to Action was the culmination of years of work. “This incredible document represents a huge step forward for the US,” said Massachusetts Breastfeeding Coalition chair Dr. Melissa Bartick, who also serves on the US Breastfeeding Committee.

The Surgeon General’s Office has also made available a press release, fact sheet, and additional information about breastfeeding and the report.

Image: Members of the US Breastfeeding Committee flanking Surgeon General Regina Benjamin at the launch of the Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding

Mass. DPH urges hospitals to ban bags, adopt evidence-based practices

September 14, 2010

In a letter last month to hospitals and nurse managers throughout the state, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health urged facilities to ban commercial discharge bags, and adopt practices known to promote breastfeeding.

Highlighting Massachusetts’ breastfeeding report card from the CDC, DPH medical director Lauren Smith, MD, noted that adherence to guidelines for formula supplementation and comprehensive breastfeeding policies were areas identified as being “in need of improvement” according to the CDC’s national survey of Maternity Practices in Infant Feeding and Care (mPINC).

Mass. Breastfeeding Coalition’s upcoming conference was also highlighted. “We’ve seen how state health departments around the country can be powerful agents for quality improvement around breastfeeding,” notes Mass. Breastfeeding Coalition’s chair, Melissa Bartick, MD.

A copy of the CDC’s mPINC report card, and a list of hospitals that have eliminated commercial discharge bags were enclosed with the letter.

Read the letter.

White House Taskforce on Childhood Obesity prominently features breastfeeding

May 12, 2010

Washington, DC– As part of its campaign to end childhood obesity, the White House just released a series of 70 specific recommendations, four of which involve breastfeeding as an obesity preventive measure. The four measures are as follows:

  • Recommendation 1.3: Hospitals and health care providers should use maternity care practices that empower new mothers to breastfeed, such as the Baby-Friendly hospital standards.
  • Recommendation 1.4: Health care providers and insurance companies should provide information to pregnant women and new mothers on breastfeeding, including the availability of educational classes, and connect pregnant women and new mothers to breastfeeding support programs to help them make an informed infant feeding decision.
  • Recommendation 1.5: Local health departments and community-based organizations, working with health care providers, insurance companies, and others should develop peer support programs that empower pregnant women and mothers to get the help and support they need from other mothers who have breastfed.
  • Recommendation 1.6: Early childhood settings should support breastfeeding.

In February 2010, First Lady Michelle Obama launched the Let’s Move! Campaign with the goal of solving the childhood obesity epidemic within a generation. As part of this effort, President Barack Obama established the Task Force on Childhood Obesity to develop and implement an interagency plan that details a coordinated strategy, identifies key benchmarks, and outlines an action plan to end the problem of childhood obesity within a generation. The action plan defines the goal of ending childhood obesity in a generation as returning to a childhood obesity rate of just 5 percent by 2030, which was the rate before childhood obesity first began to rise in the late 1970s.

The website for the Let’s Move! campaign contains the downloadable report to the president from the White House Task Force on Childhood Obesity, Solving the problem of childhood obesity within a generation. It also includes recommendations for families to reduce childhood obesity by providing information on simple ways to make healthy choices for the family.



About us | Membership info | Coalition meetings | Donate | Press library | Other resources

Copyright 2002-10 Massachusetts Breastfeeding Coalition, all rights reserved. Terms of Use. Contact info.