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Exclusive breastfeeding: Our fight with grandmothers saving our children —Bauchi mothers


By Rauf Oyewole

Lactating mothers in Bauchi State have revealed that their rejection of some old mother tale that discourages exclusive breastfeeding has saved many infants from avoidable sickness and death.

A cross section of women who spoke on Tuesday in Bauchi communities said that exclusive breastfeeding practice has improved the health of their children while reducing the economic burden of feeding the infants.

The women have started encouraging themselves on the importance of exclusive breastfeeding to avert increasing severe acute malnutrition which has threatened the lives of many kids in the state. 

It was observed that women groups called Mama-2-Mama were seen in communities such as Liman Katagum and Dass, encouraging fellow women to embrace good health. 

Data by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), stated that over 50,000 children are malnourished in the state while others need urgent care to avert mortality. 

One of the women, Hadijatu Ibrahim, said that some of the new young mothers are being enlightened to embrace exclusive breastfeeding because a good number of them do not have experience in handling infants.

“These young mothers are key to us, some of them gave birth at a very young age, they need our support on how to manage different conditions in child birth. We have been preaching exclusive breastfeeding to them right from their pregnancy stage and of course they now have knowledge and appreciate the benefit.”

One of the nursing mothers, Khadija Umar explained her insistence on practicing exclusive breastfeeding despite her mother-in-law's instruction to introduce water and food to the baby. “I told her that doctors prescribed bottled water which I know she cannot afford to buy.

“We fought and settled and thank God she has become an advocate of exclusive breastfeeding,” she said.

Another resident of Dass, Hajiya Maimuna Abubakar explained how breastfeeding exclusively had prevented her children from buying baby foods. “For six months, I don't have to bother to buy now expensive baby food. Breast milk is good for children; it prevents diseases and makes them healthy.”

During this year's World Breastfeeding Week, the UNICEF Chief of Field Office in Bauchi, Dr. Nuzhat Rafique appealed to mothers to practice exclusive breastfeeding. According to her, the state needs urgent improvement on its 24 percent of exclusive breastfeeding practice. 

She called for urgent commitment to the lives of children who are battling with severe acute malnutrition.



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