Mon registre :
0 item

Mon panier :
0 item
0,00 $US
Allaitement & Haïti - Février 2010 - Blogue
Recherche Nous joindre Langue
3095, boul. Hamel, local 105, Québec, QC, G1P 4C6 Comment se rendre ? Plan


Des cours et des conférences pour tous les goûts ! Consultez notre calendrier des activités.


FacebookTwitter

Accueil

 > 

Blogue

 > 

Février 2010

 > 

Allaitement & Haïti


Lundi 8 février 2010

Allaitement & Haïti

Quotidiennement, nous sommes tous touchés par les événements qui se déroulent à Haïti, pas besoin de vous faire part des événements, vous les connaissez. Cependant où je me dois de vous informer c'est sur ce que vous, les mamans, pouvez faire. Effectivement, La Ligue la Lèche, nous a fait parvenir l'information qu'il est possible d'effectuer des dons de lait MATERNEL qui sera acheminé soit en Haïti ou aux États-Unis ou encore d'offrir des donations en argent pour supporter les enfants plus vieux qui ont d'autres besoins. Je vous joins l'information anglaise reçue et vous pourrez trouver toutes les informations nécessaires pour faire vos dons. L'annonce est faite. Merci à l'avance de la population haïtienne.
Manon

January 27, 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE*
*UPDATED STATEMENT:
Breastfeeding is the First Line of Defense in a Disaster*

*Washington, DC*--The Human Milk Banking Association of North America
(HMBANA), United States Breastfeeding Committee (USBC), International
Lactation Consultant Association/United States Lactation Consultant
Association (ILCA/USLCA), and La Leche League International (LLLI) strongly
affirm the importance of breastfeeding in emergency situations, and call on
relief workers and health care providers serving victims of disasters to
protect, promote, and support mothers to breastfeed their babies. During an
emergency, breastfeeding mothers provide their infants with safe food and
water and disease protection that maximize their chances of survival.

This week, the International Milk Bank Project and Quick International
Courier coordinated a shipment of milk from the HMBANA member banks to
supplement a mother's own milk for the premature, medically fragile, and
orphaned infants aboard the U.S. Navy ship *Comfort* stationed off the coast
of Haiti. This milk will help this small group of infants. In this highly
unusual circumstance the infrastructure associated with the *Comfort*'s
resources allows U.S. sourced donor milk to help fragile Haitian babies.


Donor milk, however, is not a solution for the large number of infants and
young children affected by the earthquake in Haiti.
Members of the public
who wish to promote the survival of mothers and babies in Haiti can donate
money to the following organizations: UNICEF, Save the Children Alliance,
World Vision, and Action Against Hunger.
These organizations are using best
practice to aid both breastfed and non-breastfed infants. Members of the
public can be confident that donations to these organizations will support
breastfeeding and help save the lives of babies.


Interventions to protect infants include supporting mothers to initiate and
continue exclusive breastfeeding, relactation for mothers who have ceased
breastfeeding, and finding wet nurses for motherless or separated babies.
Every effort should be made to minimize the number of infants and young
children who do not have access to breastfeeding. Artificially fed infants
require intensive support from aid organizations including infant formula,
clean water, soap, a stove, fuel, education, and medical support. This is
not an easy endeavor. Formula feeding is extremely risky in emergency
conditions and artificially fed infants are vulnerable to the biggest
killers of children in emergencies: diarrhea and pneumonia.


As stated by UNICEF and WHO, no donations of infant formula or powdered milk
should be sent to the Haiti emergency. Such donations are difficult to
manage logistically, actively detract from the aid effort, and put infant's
lives at risk. Distribution of infant formula should only occur in a
strictly controlled manner. Stress does not prevent women from making milk
for their babies, and breastfeeding women should not be given any infant
formula or powdered milk.


There are ongoing needs in the U.S. for human milk for premature and other
extremely ill infants because of the protection it provides from diseases
and infections. If a mother is unable to provide her own milk to her
premature or sick infant, donor human milk is often requested from a human
milk bank. American mothers can help their compatriots who find themselves
in need of breast milk for their sick baby by donating to a milk bank that
is a member of the Human Milk Banking Association of North America.

For more information about donating milk to a milk bank, contact HMBANA at
www.hmbana.org

Additional information for relief workers and health care professionals can
be provided from the United States Breastfeeding Committee at
www.usbreastfeeding.org
ILCA/USLCA at www.ilca.org or www.uslca.org

or La Leche League International at
www.llli.org

A list of regional milk banks is available on the HMBANA Web site at
www.hmbana.org/index/locations


*USBC is an organization of organizations. Opinions expressed by USBC are
not necessarily the position of all member organizations and opinions
expressed by USBC member organization representatives are not necessarily
the position of USBC. *

The information, resources and services included in the above URLs are not necessarily approved or endorsed by the Best Start Resource Centre.


Hiltrud Dawson

Hiltrud Dawson
Health Promotion Consultant
Best Start Resource Centre
c/o Health Nexus
180 Dundas Street West, Suite 1900
Toronto ON, M5G 1Z8
Phone: 416 408 2249 or 1 800 397 9567 ext. 2250
Direct: 905 388 0181
Fax: 905 388 0181 (call first, please)
h.dawson@healthnexus.ca
www.beststart.org


Register now! Space is limited - 'Early bird' rates end January 8th.
Best Start Resource Centre: 2010 Annual Conference
February 17-19, 2010: Toronto, ON
http://www.beststart.org/events/detail/bsannualconf10/index.htm

Aucun commentaire

Laisser un commentaire :

Votre nom * :


Votre courriel (ne sera pas publié) * :


Votre commentaire * :




Tapez les caractères que vous voyez dans la case (sensible à la casse).


Hébergement par CyberCat - Graphisme © 2006 - Martine Lapointe - PointHhtml.com CyberCat inc. Point html
Hébergement par : CyberCat.ca
Graphisme par : PointHTML.com