PAHO/WHO recommends measures including paid maternity leave, flexible and reduced work hours, and accommodations to make breastfeeding easy at work
Washington, D.C. – Employers who support breastfeeding
by their female employees are not only taking the ethical high road,
they are likely to reap benefits for their businesses and their
countries’ economies, said experts at the Pan American Health
Organization/World Health Organization in the lead-up to World Breastfeeding Week,
1-7 August 2015.
“The benefits of breastfeeding extend to mother and baby, and promoting breastfeeding
policies in the workplace is essential,” said Dr. Carissa F. Etienne,
Director of the Pan American Health Organization/World Health
Organization (PAHO/WHO). “Employers also stand to benefit as it leads to
happier, more dependable and productive employees.”
The theme of World Breastfeeding Week 2015 is “Breastfeeding
and Work: Let’s make it work!” The campaign highlights the need to
support women in balancing work and family and especially to breastfeed their babies according to public health recommendations.
PAHO/WHO recommends that infants be exclusively breastfed for the first six months of life, followed by breastfeeding
and appropriate complementary foods for two years or more. These
recommendations are based on research that demonstrates health benefits
from breastfeeding that range from reduced infections and improved IQ in babies to lower risk of breast and ovarian cancer in mothers.
Studies also show that promoting breastfeeding in the workplace produces benefits for employers, including:
Greater employee loyalty to companies as a result of gratitude and satisfaction;
Reduced absenteeism because breastfeeding employees’ babies get sick less often and less severely;
Retention of employees, reducing the need for training and the loss of qualified personnel; and
Improved productivity.
To support breastfeeding, PAHO/WHO recommends that employers implement policies including paid maternity leave, paid breaks for breastfeeding, a dedicated room for breastfeeding in the workplace that is private and hygienic, and flexible or reduced working hours for breastfeeding mothers.
In addition to urging employers to adopt these policies, PAHO/WHO
experts advise that governments should play a role by implementing
maternity protection legislation and related measures consistent with
the International Labor Organization’s 2000 Maternity Protection
Convention. It calls for at least 14 weeks of paid maternity leave for
new mothers as well as breastfeeding breaks and
facilities in the workplace. Although only 29 countries globally (in the
Americas, only Belize and Cuba) have ratified the 2000 convention, many
more countries have implemented provisions of two earlier ILO
conventions on maternity protection.
In the Americas, Chile “has established the gold standard,” said Dr.
Chessa Lutter, PAHO/WHO senior advisor in food and nutrition, by legally
requiring six months of paid maternity leave for working mothers, the
period of time recommended by PAHO/WHO for babies to be exclusively breastfed. To date, Chile is the only country in the Americas to legally mandate this.
“Many countries have made progress in this area, with legislation and policies that support working mothers to breastfeed,”
said Lutter. “But a lot needs to be done to ensure implementation and
enforcement, and countries that do not yet have such legislation really
need to begin working on it.”
A musical tribute to mother’s milk
Popular Honduran singer-songwriter Guillermo Anderson has joined PAHO/WHO in producing a music video in support of World Breastfeeding
Week 2015. Honduran First Lady Ana García de Hernández will officially
launch the new video, “A la leche materna” (To Mother’s Milk), on Aug. 3
along with Minister of Health Yolani Batres, Minister of Labor Carlos
Madero, and PAHO/WHO Representative Ana Treasure, from the Presidential
House in Tegucigalpa.
Anderson, one of Honduras’s best-known artists, is known for songs
that celebrate his country’s natural beauty and also touch on important
social and environmental issues. He is from La Ceiba, where the music
video was filmed in June.