Nurses, midwives and health visitors should encourage mothers to breastfeed beyond six months, alongside giving solid food, according to new recommendations from the Royal College of Paediatric and Child Health (RCPCH).
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In a position statement on breastfeeding, published today, the RCPCH also recommends advising mothers that using infant formula supplements, or combining formula feeding with breastfeeding, make it more difficult to establish exclusive breastfeeding.
For those mothers who cannot, or choose not to, breastfeed, the RCPCH recommends appropriate support and education on infant feeding should be provided.
The statement also extends its recommendations to local authorities, with the College calling on Public Health England to develop ‘a national strategy to increase initiation and continuation of breastfeeding’.
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Dr Cheryll Adams, executive director of the Institute of Health Visiting, welcomed the recommendations. She said: ‘We warmly welcome this new guidance from RCPCH on supporting women to continue breastfeeding beyond the first few weeks. Breastfeeding is natural, but not all mums find it easy, and some mums cannot or choose not to do it, so we must respect that too. Mums often need support, and health visitors are one of the key healthcare professionals to help mothers establish breastfeeding through the universal health visiting service’.
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