Infant feeding policies and monitoring systems: A qualitative study of European Countries.

Autor: Gray, Helen, Zakarija‐Grković, Irena, Cattaneo, Adriano, Vassallo, Charlene, Borg Buontempo, Mariella, Harutyunyan, Susanna, Bettinelli, Maria Enrica, Rosin, Stefanie
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Zdroj: Maternal & Child Nutrition; Oct2022, Vol. 18 Issue 4, p1-12, 12p
Abstrakt: Implementation of the Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding varies widely among countries. Policymakers would benefit from insights into obstacles and enablers. Our aim was to explore the processes behind the development and implementation of national infant and young child feeding policies and monitoring systems in Europe. A qualitative study design was employed to analyze open text responses from six European countries (Croatia, Germany, Lithuania, Spain, Turkey and Ukraine) using inductive thematic analysis. Countries were selected based on their World Breastfeeding Trends Initiative scores on national policy and monitoring systems. The 33‐item online questionnaire was distributed to country representatives and completed by country teams. Key enablers and strengths included strong and continuous government commitment to infant and young child feeding, an operational national breastfeeding authority, a national and active monitoring and evaluation system, implementation of the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes in national legislation, the integration of skilled breastfeeding supporters, the implementation of the Baby‐friendly Hospital Initiative, and positive cultural norms and traditions supporting optimal infant and young child feeding. In some countries, UNICEF played a key role in funding and designing policies and monitoring systems. Weak government leadership, the strong influence of the industry, lack of adequate national legislation on the International Code and cultural norms which devalued breastfeeding were particularly noted as obstacles. Government commitment, funding and protection of optimal infant and young child feeding are essential to the implementation of strong national policies and monitoring systems. Key messages: Government commitment was essential to the implementation of strong policies and programs, adequate funding and legislation to protect breastfeeding.Cultural norms and traditions lay behind the prioritization of breastfeeding in some countries, while in others severe adversity led to an increased role for UNICEF which provided the framework and funding to establish strong policies and programs.The influence of the formula industry can undermine government priorities, health professional training and public opinion.This study provides lessons for policymakers who wish to protect, promote and support optimal infant and young child feeding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index
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