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RECOGNISING THAT:
Breastfeeding is a unique process that:
Provides ideal nutrition for infants and contributes to their healthy growth
and development Reduces incidence and severity of infectious diseases,
thereby lowering infant morbidity and mortality Contributes to women's
health by reducing the risk of breast and ovarian cancer, and by increasing
the spacing between pregnancies Provides social and economic benefits to
the family and the nation Provides most women with a sense of satisfaction
when successfully carried out
and that Recent Research has found that:
these benefits increase with increased exclusiveness of breastfeeding during
the first six months of life, and thereafter with increased duration of
breastfeeding with complementary foods, and programme intervention can
result in positive changes in breastfeeding behaviour
WE THEREFORE DECLARE THAT:
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As a global goal for optimal maternal and child health and nutrition, all
women should be enabled to practise exclusive breastfeeding and all infants
should be fed exclusively on breastmilk from birth to 4-6 months of age.
Thereafter, children should continue to be breastfed, while receiving appropriate
and adequate complementary foods, for up to two years of age or beyond.
This child-feeding ideal is to be achieved by creating an appropriate environment
of awareness and support so that women can breastfeed in this manner.
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Attainment of this goal requires, in many countries, the reinforcement
of a "breastfeeding culture" and its vigorous defence against
incursions of a "bottle-feeding culture". This requires commitment
and advocacy for social mobilization, utilizing to the full the prestige
and authority of acknowledged leaders of society in all walks of life.
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Efforts should be made to increase women's confidence in their ability
to breastfeed. Such empowerment involves the removal of constraints and
influences that manipulate perceptions and behaviour towards breastfeeding,
often by subtle and indirect means. This requires sensitivity, continued
vigilance, and a responsive and comprehensive communications strategy involving
all media and addressed to all levels of society. Furthermore, obstacles
to breastfeeding within the health system, the workplace and the community
must be eliminated.
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Measures should be taken to ensure that women are adequately nourished
for their optimal health and that of their families. Furthermore, ensuring
that all women also have access to family planning information and services
allows them to sustain breastfeeding and avoid shortened birth intervals
that may compromise their health and nutritional status, and that of their
children.
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All governments should develop national breastfeeding policies and set
appropriate national targets for the 1990s. They should establish a national
system for monitoring the attainment of their targets, and they should
develop indicators such as the prevalence of exclusively breastfed infants
at discharge from maternity services, and the prevalence of exclusively
breastfed infants at four months of age.
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National authorities are further urged to integrate their breastfeeding
policies into their overall health and development policies. In so doing
they should reinforce all actions that protect, promote and support breastfeeding
within complementary programmes such as prenatal and perinatal care, nutrition,
family planning services, and prevention and treatment of common maternal
and childhood diseases. All healthcare staff should be trained in the skills
necessary to implement these breastfeeding policies. |
OPERATIONAL TARGETS
All governments by the year 1995 should have:
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Appointed a national breastfeeding coordinator of appropriate authority,
and established a multisectoral national breastfeeding committee composed
of representatives from relevant government departments, non-governmental
organizations, and health professional associations.
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Ensured that every facility providing maternity services fully practises
all ten of the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding set out in the joint
WHO/UNICEF statement "Protecting, promoting and supporting breastfeeding:
the special role of maternity services".
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Taken action to give effect to the principles and aim of all Articles of
the International Code of Marketing of Breast-Milk Substitutes and subsequent
relevant World Health Assembly resolutions in their entirety; and enacted imaginative legislation protecting the breastfeeding rights of
working women and established means for its enforcement
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WE ALSO CALL UPON INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS TO:
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Draw up action strategies for protecting, promoting and supporting breastfeeding,
including global monitoring and evaluation of their strategies
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Support national situation analyses and surveys and the development of
national goals and targets for action; and
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Encourage and support national authorities in planning, implementing, monitoring
and evaluating their breastfeeding policies
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The Innocenti Declaration was produced and adopted by participants at the
WHO/UNICEF policymakers' meeting on "Breastfeeding in the 1990s: A
Global Initiative, co-sponsored by the United States Agency for International
Development (A.I.D.) and the Swedish International Development Authority
(SIDA), held at the Spedale degli Innocenti, Florence, Italy, on 30 July
- 1 August 1990. The Declaration reflects the content of the original background
document for the meeting and the views expressed in group and plenary sessions.

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