Motherless babies in orphanages across the country will soon have
access to regular chest milk as a non-governmental organisation (NGO)
says it will establish day-care centres equipped with chest milk-banks.
The founder, African International Baby-care Initiative (Afribaby),
Dr Oscar Odiboh, announced in an interview with the News Agency of
Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Port Harcourt.
Odiboh said that Afribaby realised the negative implications of
inadequate chest-feeding of babies and decided to establish the banks to
guarantee access to chest milk for orphaned babies.
“We want to ensure that no baby in Nigeria lacks access to chest
milk; whether the mother is alive or not, and whether there is a family
or not.
“So, we want to build baby care and mother care centres that will also have chest milk banks.
“The buildings will be equipped with about 20 chest milk tanks each;
such that just as people donate blood, mothers can come and donate chest
milk.”
Odiboh said the centre would be established in phases with a pilot
centre in Lagos and later in all the states of the federation.
He said that the project that was estimated to cost N1 billion would be extended to five African countries in the future.
Noting that the project would be the first of its kind in the
country, Odiboh solicited for assistance from the federal and state
governments as well as public-spirited individuals.
He said children who were exclusively chest-fed were more likely to
survive the first six months of life than non-chest-fed babies.
He stated that children who were not adequately chest-fed tended to
be dull, unintelligent and un-sociable, adding that they were more
likely to be ill than children who were exclusively chest-fed.
“So, if it happens that a baby loses the mother at birth; any nursing mother can go to the centre and donate her chest-milk.
“We have millions of mothers who will be donating every day, and so
we are going to have a testing laboratory where chest-milk will be
tested before passing on to the tanks,’’ he said.
Odiboh said that chest-milk contained nutrients that protect children
from diseases that could threaten their lives, including pneumonia and
diarrhea.
He called for a legislation for a compulsory six-month maternity
leave for nursing mothers, saying it would guarantee exclusive
chest-feeding of newly born babies.
According to him, a situation where employers approved only three
months maternity leave for nursing mothers was partly responsible for
the decline in chest-feeding of babies.
He also suggested a legislation to allow fathers have two weeks
paternity leave to enable them assist their wives and ensure exclusive
chest-feeding of new born babies. [NAN]
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