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           | Overview | 
         
           | 3.1 | Over the last few decades, a growing number of scientific  studies have shed light on the extensive health benefits of breastfeeding for  both babies and mothers. These benefits are diverse, relating to the  physiological, nutritional and cognitive aspects of infant development as well  as maternal well-being.  | 
         
           | 3.2 | The first part of this chapter examines the  health benefits of breastfeeding for babies and mothers. These health benefits  are immediate and also persist until later in life. The chapter will also focus  on the unique properties of human breast milk and the valuable role of milk  banks. Breastfeeding is also examined from an economic perspective, with an  analysis of the short and long-term impacts on Australia’s health system.  | 
         
           | 3.3 | Breast milk is also an environmentally friendly  product. Many consumables are needed for the packaging of infant formula and  the production of bottles and teats. This requires significant resources and  poses the problem of waste disposal for some of these items. Although  breastfeeding is environment friendly it is often overlooked in environmental  programs.  | 
         
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           | Health benefits for the baby | 
         
           | 3.4 | There is solid evidence for the protective  effects of breastfeeding against three classes of infectious disease in babies:  gastrointestinal illnesses, respiratory tract infections, and otitis media (middle  ear infections).  | 
         
           | 3.5 | Studies suggest that the longer a baby is  breastfed, the greater the protective effect against infections (known as a ‘dose-response’  effect). Exclusive breastfeeding appears to confer a greater protective effect  against gastrointestinal and respiratory illnesses, while partial or minimal  breastfeeding is not as protective.1 Even an extra two months of breastfeeding can  make a difference. A recent study showed that babies exclusively breastfed for  four to six months only were four times more likely to suffer from pneumonia and  twice as likely to suffer recurrent ear infections than those breastfed for six  months or longer.2 | 
         
           | 3.6 | A landmark study in breastfeeding research was the  Promotion of Breastfeeding Intervention Trial (PROBIT) in the Republic of  Belarus, which examined more than 17,000 mother and baby pairs. The findings  showed that exclusive breastfeeding in the first year of life decreased the  risk of gastrointestinal tract infections by 40 per cent.3 | 
         
           | 3.7 | Babies who are not breastfed have a  significantly increased risk of developing middle ear infections.4 Breastfeeding also protects against recurrent otitis media, which can  eventually result in hearing loss in children. Again, the shorter the duration  of breastfeeding, the greater the risks of contracting these infections. It is  worth noting that the rates of recurrent otitis media are also ten times worse  in Indigenous children than in the general population (see chapter 7).  | 
         
           | 3.8 | The incidence of asthma and allergies may also  be reduced by breastfeeding for longer. Dr   Wendy Oddy  and colleagues from the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research conducted  the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study, which followed 2187 children to  six years of age. They found that a significant reduction in the risk of  childhood asthma at the age of six years occurs if exclusive breastfeeding is  continued for at least four months after birth. While the exact reasons are  still unknown, protection against allergies may be because breastfed babies are  less exposed to foreign dietary antigens (e.g. from cow’s milk).  The special properties of breast milk may  also promote a more effective immune system.5 The extent to which breastfeeding can  protect against asthma and allergies is still to be determined, with a recent  Australian study at the Children’s Hospital at Westmead, finding that longer  duration of breastfeeding did not prevent the onset of these conditions by the  age of five years.6  | 
         
           | 3.9 | Some studies suggest that breastfeeding could  also have a positive effect on a child’s neurodevelopment. However, the links  between breastfeeding and increased cognitive ability and intelligence are  subject to debate.  It is difficult to  attribute greater intelligence to breastfeeding alone, when environmental  factors could also have an influence.7 For example, a recent study examined the effect of breastfeeding on the IQ of  preschool children. Results showed that neither the mode of feeding (breastfed  or formula fed) nor the duration of breastfeeding were related to the IQ of  children at four years of age when the quality of the home environment and  socio-economic status of families were taken into account.8  | 
         
           | 3.10 | Breastfeeding may help to prevent a number of  other conditions including some childhood leukaemias, urinary tract infections,  inflammatory bowel disease, coeliac disease and sudden infant death syndrome  (SIDS). There is also evidence of possible associations between breastfeeding  and lower rates of dental occlusion9,  bacteraemia, meningitis and type 1 diabetes.10 Further research is required to determine the  significance of these associations. | 
         
           | 3.11 | The fact that breastfeeding provides important  health benefits for both mothers and babies is demonstrated in the consistency  of results from a growing body of breastfeeding research. However, most  breastfeeding studies are observational as it is considered unethical to  conduct controlled infant feeding experiments. Therefore, it is important to  note that there are limitations to breastfeeding research methods.11  | 
         
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           | Obesity, early nutrition and chronic disease risk | 
         
           | 3.12 | There is growing interest amongst public health  researchers in exploring the links between early nutrition and chronic disease  risk in childhood and into adulthood.12 Given that obesity has become a serious health problem in Australia,  the association between breastfeeding and weight gain is of particular interest  to the committee. | 
         
           | 3.13 | Strong evidence is accumulating to show that children  are less likely to be overweight or obese if they have been breastfed as  babies.13 Babies who are breastfed for at least three  months have a lower rate of obesity during childhood, with the protective  effect increasing if breastfeeding continues until six months. This protective  effect may also extend into adulthood.14  | 
         
           | 3.14 | Professor   Colin Binns  of the School of Public    Health at Curtin   University has emphasised the  importance of the association between breastfeeding and obesity. He argues that  evidence of this single health impact is more than sufficient justification to  implement a major public health promotion campaign for breastfeeding.15  | 
         
           | 3.15 | There are several ways in which breastfeeding may  lower the risk obesity. One hypothesis is that breastfed babies grow at a  slower rate. Putting on weight too quickly may reduce the likelihood of growing  into a leaner body shape.16 The Perth Infant Feeding Study Mark II found  a positive association between weight gain at one year of age and early and regular  consumption of formula.17 | 
         
           | 3.16 | Satiety, or the feeling of fullness, could be  another key to explaining the breastfeeding and obesity relationship. Breastfeeding  babies know when they have consumed enough. The practice of encouraging  formula-fed babies to finish all of the milk in a bottle could make them less responsive  to natural hunger cues and feelings of fullness as they move onto solids later  in life.18 Conversely, breastfeeding may help to program and regulate appetite at an early  age.19  | 
         
           | 3.17 | Evidence also suggests that breastfeeding protects  against a range of chronic illnesses which can develop in adulthood, including  type 2 diabetes, heart disease, atherosclerosis, and high blood pressure.20  | 
         
           | 3.18 | Breastfeeding can provide optimal nutrition from  birth, and confers health advantages that persist until later in life. As seen  later in the chapter, these long-term health benefits can also have more  pronounced effects at the population level, with broader implications for  economically sustainable health care.  | 
         
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           | Health benefits for the mother | 
         
           | 3.19 | Convincing evidence exists for breastfeeding’s  positive impact on maternal health. It is beneficial in promoting the mother’s  recovery from childbirth; ensuring the delayed return of menstruation and  fertility; and significantly reducing the risk of pre-menopausal breast cancer.  Breastfeeding promotes a more rapid return of the uterus to its pre-pregnant  state. It stimulates the release of the hormone oxytocin, stimulating uterine  contractions and minimising the risk of haemorrhage.21  | 
         
           | 3.20 | Breastfeeding also contributes to a longer  period of infertility after birth, leading to increased spacing between  pregnancies. However, the extent of both the maternal recovery process and  suppressed fertility also depends on the duration, intensity and frequency of  breastfeeding.22 | 
         
           | 3.21 | The protective effect of breastfeeding against  pre-menopausal breast cancer has been shown in a number of studies. Protection  against post-menopausal breast cancer is also probable.23 A recent review of 47 studies throughout 30 countries indicated that for every  12 months of breastfeeding, the risk of breast cancer decreases by 4.3 per  cent.24  | 
         
           | 3.22 | A number of other possible health benefits for  mothers include: accelerated weight loss and return to a  pre-pregnancy body weight;25reduced risk of ovarian and endometrial cancers; 26improved bone mineralisation, leading to  decreased risk of osteoporosis;27 protection against rheumatoid arthritis; 28 andprotection against type 2 diabetes.29
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           | 3.23 | Given that Australian women are having babies  later in life, when they are at a higher risk for obstetric complications, the promotion  of the health benefits of breastfeeding for mothers is all the more crucial  as public health strategy.30 | 
         
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           | Emotional benefits to the mother and baby | 
         
           | 3.24 | The emotional closeness generated by  breastfeeding benefits both the mother and the baby. It is a pleasurable and  positive skin-to-skin interaction. The hormones oxytocin and prolactin are  stimulated, reducing maternal stress and fostering emotional bonding.31 | 
         
           | 3.25 | Some studies have shown that breastfeeding can  prevent or limit the duration of post-natal depression in mothers.32 Others have suggested a link between breastfeeding and child and adolescent  mental health. For example, Dr Oddy  has found an association between breastfeeding for six months or longer and a  reduction in mental health problems throughout childhood and adolescence. However,  evidence in this field is still limited, given the environmental factors that  need to be taken into account.33 | 
         
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           | The unique  properties of breast milk | 
         
           | 3.26 | Breast  milk is a complex living substance and a food that is nutritionally complete  for babies until six months of age.34 No formula product can  exactly replicate breast milk.35 It is a ‘bioactive fluid’ with changing  physical properties and concentrations of nutrients. It is also extremely  important in providing protection against infection:
 Human  milk represents a most valuable weapon for enhancing the immature immunologic  system of the neonate and for strengthening its host defence mechanisms against  infective or other foreign agents.36  | 
         
           | 3.27 | Colostrum,  the secretion produced in the first few days after birth, is nutrient-rich, and  contains essential proteins, vitamins, enzymes, growth factors, antibodies and  non-pathogenic bacteria to protect against illness.37 This first secretion  gradually changes into mature milk during the first one to two weeks after  birth. For example, there are lower concentrations of fat in colostrum than  in mature milk but higher concentrations of protein and minerals.38  | 
         
           | 3.28 | Breast  milk is dynamic and interactive. Its composition varies between individuals,  depending on diet and stages of lactation. Breast milk’s complex biochemistry means  that it changes from morning to night and even over the course of a feed. The  milk first ingested by a baby during a feed has a lower fat content, which  steadily increases until the feeling of ‘satiety’ is reached.39 | 
         
           | 3.29 | The concept of breast milk as a food should be better  emphasised. Dr Debra Hector  from the New South Wales Centre for Public Health Nutrition noted that there  had been ‘somewhat of a separation between breastfeeding and the introduction  of solid foods into the diet.’ 40 People  may not perceive breast milk as a food, considering that nutrition begins with  solids. This can lead to a diminished understanding of the crucial importance  of breast milk in establishing good nutrition from birth. | 
         
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           | Promoting the  health benefits of breastfeeding | 
         
           | 3.30 | Given  the extensive health benefits for both babies and mothers that can be  attributed to breastfeeding, the committee believes there should be greater  public promotion of the benefits of breastfeeding. This was recommended in a number  of submissions to the inquiry.41  | 
         
           | 3.31 | There were strong views expressed about the way  in which public health messages around breastfeeding ought to be framed. Some  argued that the slogan ‘breast is best’ is misleading, and can be interpreted  as meaning that breastfeeding is a lofty ideal, but unattainable for many  mothers in reality. Instead, it would be better to promote breastfeeding as the  normal and natural way to feed babies.42 Others  suggested that a public health campaign on breastfeeding would be more  effective if the risks of formula-feeding were more heavily emphasised.43 However, focusing on the risks of infant formula  may have the effect of alienating those mothers whose sincere efforts to  breastfeed have not been supported strongly enough by the community and health  profession. | 
         
           | 3.32 | The  committee believes that a positive campaign promoting breastfeeding as normal  would be the most effective way to present the breastfeeding message. Any  public health campaign must also be supported by wider practical action and  structural changes in the community and health profession to help breastfeeding  mothers.  | 
         
           | 3.33 | The committee supports breastfeeding for as long  as the mother and child are comfortable to continue, but agrees with experts  such as Professor Binns, who noted that more  benefit would be gained from promoting exclusive breastfeeding for the first  six months of a baby’s life, than to promote prolonged breastfeeding beyond 12  months of age.44 It  should be noted that the health benefits of breastfeeding are at a maximum in  the earliest months of life.45 | 
         
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           | ‘The gift of human  milk’ | 
         
           | 3.34 | A human milk bank is a service that collects,  screens, processes and distributes donated human milk, primarily for babies who  cannot be breastfed.46 Given  that breast milk provides the best protection against infection and promotes  proper growth and nutrition for healthy full-term babies, it is particularly  important that sick and premature babies also have access to breast milk,  especially when their own mother cannot provide it (for example, due to low  milk supply, HIV infection, breast cancer treatment, or when the baby is on  life support). | 
         
           | 3.35 | The WHO’s Global Strategy for Infant and Young  Child Feeding lists a number of feeding options for those few health situations  where infants cannot, or should not, be breastfed. The alternatives are:  expressed milk from the baby’s mother, breast milk from a wet nurse or a human  milk bank, or a breast milk substitute.47 The WHO has long affirmed the value of milk banks in its policies on infant  feeding.48 In 1980, the World Health Assembly endorsed a joint WHO/UNICEF resolution which  stated: ‘Where it is not possible for the biological mother to breastfeed, the  first alternative, if available, should be the use of human milk from other  sources. Human milk banks should be made available in appropriate situations.’49 | 
         
           | 3.36 | Milk banking originated in Europe in  the early twentieth century as technological and hygienic advances allowed  human milk to be refrigerated and stored. Prior to this, it was common practice  for babies whose mothers could not breastfeed to receive milk from another lactating  mother or a ‘wet nurse’. The number of milk banks grew across the developed  world throughout the century, although many milk banks closed their doors during  the 1980s due to fears surrounding HIV/AIDS transmission. However, as research  demonstrated the safety of pasteurisation techniques in eliminating HIV and  other viruses, milk banks experienced a resurgence as a safe source of donor  milk.50 | 
         
           | 3.37 | Milk banks provide an important alternative  source of human milk. Because of human breast milk’s unique immunologic  properties, access to this milk is often critical to the survival of sick and premature  babies with under-developed immune systems. Donated breast milk has also been  used successfully to treat babies with intolerance to formula, severe  allergies, immune deficiencies and congenital abnormalities. It also helps  babies recover from surgery.51 | 
         
           | 3.38 | One of the most serious health risks faced by  premature babies is neonatal necrotising enterocolitis (NEC), a gastrointestinal  infection which effectively causes a death of the bowel area.52 Mortality rates from NEC in neonatal intensive care units can be as high as 40  per cent. Premature babies fed exclusively with breast milk, which promotes the  maturation of the gut, have a reduced chance of succumbing to NEC. In a study  of 900 premature babies, NEC was six to ten times more common in those who  received only formula, than in those fed breast milk alone.53 | 
         
           | 3.39 | Today human milk banks operate across North and South   America, Europe and Asia.54 Brazil is  renowned for its large network of milk banks. In 1999-2000, more than 150 milk  banks processed over 218,000 litres of milk that was given to 300,000 premature  and low birth weight babies, saving the Brazilian Government an estimated $620  million that year.55  When my mother had her babies in the mid to late 1960s, she was  asked by midwives to wet-nurse other babies on the maternity ward. Indeed,  across the world, wet-nursing and the giving of human milk to mothers and  babies in need is a regular practice, accepted as a gift between women. With  fear of AIDS and legal implications, this culture of sharing has been taken  away from women and we are the poorer for it. To set up a network of milk banks  across the country would reintroduce the opportunity for giving the gift of  human milk.56  | 
         
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           | Milk banks in Australia | 
         
           | 3.40 | Australia  currently has only two donor milk banking facilities, although the Royal  Women’s Hospital in Melbourne  noted its capacity (and that of other hospitals) to freeze a mother’s expressed  milk for her own baby’s consumption.57 In 2006, Australia opened its first milk bank in more than two decades at the  King Edward Memorial Hospital in Perth, which caters for premature babies.58 The ‘PREM Bank’ in Perth is  sponsored by the Rotary Clubs of Thornlie and Belmont,  the Perron Charitable Trust and Telethon and is the result of a collaboration  between North Metropolitan Health Service, The University of Western Australia  and the Women and Infants Research Foundation. | 
         
           | 3.41 | The Mothers Milk Bank, operating at the John  Flynn Medical Centre on the Gold Coast, is Australia’s  only other milk bank. The committee visited this site in the course of the  inquiry.  The Mothers Milk Bank presently  operates as a pilot program with limited funding and support from volunteers. There  are about 500 registered donors, with around 280 currently donating milk. After  instruction in sterile techniques, these women express once a day and freeze  the milk which is collected by a volunteer every week. The milk is then  screened, pasteurised, re-tested, and delivered to babies and mothers in need. On  a weekly basis the Mothers Milk Bank pasteurises nine litres of milk.59 | 
         
           | 3.42 | The committee heard from parents whose babies  had thrived on donations from the Mothers Milk Bank. Twins born prematurely  were fed with their mother’s expressed breast milk and supplemented with donor  milk for two months.60 Another  mother, whose son had severe allergic reactions to formula, struggled with her  own low milk supply. With donor milk, her son’s nutritional and health needs  are being met.61
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           | Box 3.1            Mothers  Milk Bank Pty Ltd
                 Mothers Milk Bank Pty Ltd is a private not-for-profit company formed by  Midwife and Nurse Manager, Marea Ryan, of the John Flynn Private Hospital on  the Gold Coast.This vital health service, the first of its kind on the East Coast,  provides pasteurised donor mother’s milk to infants where human milk is not  available, ensuring optimal physical and neurological development for these  infants. In conjunction with a similar initiative established in Perth, the  Mothers Milk Bank (MMB) is committed to seeing a network of donor milk banks  operational around Australia within ten years. MMB shares a common vision with  our Perth colleagues – ‘Human Milk for Human Babies’ – every baby needs to have  the best food source available. Initially MMB will offer pasteurised milk on  demand to premature and sick infants. In the long-term, MMB aims to provide an  avenue whereby human milk is available for all babies up to the age of at least  six months. This will lay the foundation of the future health of Australian  children.
 Source: Mothers  Milk Bank, sub 217.
 
 
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           | Barriers to milk banking | 
         
           | 3.43 | Roslyn Lording, a health promotion practitioner  and hospital social worker, is the author of a 2006 review of human milk  banking in Australia.  She has analysed some of the barriers to milk banking in the Australian  context. There is anecdotal evidence that there would be ‘initial reluctance’62 towards milk banking amongst health professionals, including neonatologists,  who may be unconvinced about the value of donor milk over formula.63 The costs and logistics of establishing milk banks may also be a disincentive,  especially when formula is more readily accessible.64  | 
         
           | 3.44 | Concerns about the safety of milk banking and infection  control have also been raised.65  However, evidence from Australia  and around the world shows that modern pasteurisation techniques are effective  in preventing the transmission of infection and maintaining the quality of the  milk.66   | 
         
           | 3.45 | Another minor issue relates to the  classification of breast milk as a body tissue in some jurisdictions and as a  food in others. There are calls for milk to be classified consistently as a  food across Australia.   The matter is currently under review in Queensland. 67  | 
         
           | 3.46 | NSW Health notes that given the increasing  community interest in human milk banks, a review should be undertaken prior to  any wider establishment in Australia. Comprehensive evidence assessing the  benefits of donor human milk for premature babies and the possible risks of  disease transfer has not yet been compiled in Australia. Therefore, a review  should address these issues and also look at a national regulatory and quality  framework within which a network of milk banks in Australia could operate. The  framework would need to address a number of minimum standards, including donor  recruitment and selection, storage and handling of milk, testing and  pasteurisation of milk, and incident reporting.68  | 
         
           | 3.47 | Keeping these issues in mind, the committee believes  that government support for milk banks would constitute an important public  health investment.69  With  sufficient funding, strict safety measures and greater awareness of the  benefits of breast milk amongst health professionals and the public, the  barriers to milk banking can be overcome.  | 
         
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           | The future of milk banks in Australia | 
         
           | 3.48 | It is clear to the committee that a national  network of publicly funded milk banks would give Australian babies a healthier  start to life, reduce health care costs and provide real support for mothers who  are unable to provide their baby with breast milk.  Gwen Moody from the Australian Lactation Consultants  Association described to the committee an example of a woman who is unable to  breastfeed. I  have got a woman with breast cancer at the moment who is seven or eight months  pregnant. She was starting chemotherapy on Friday, so in the week before,  because the baby is potentially going to be born early, we got her expressing  colostrum crazily so we would at least set the baby’s gut up because she had  breastfed her two previous children. She has got inflammatory breast cancer,  which is fairly advanced.70 | 
         
           | 3.49 | Professor Peter Hartmann of the King Edward  Memorial Hospital milk bank estimated that if a premature baby in their unit is  given breast milk instead of formula, the recovery period is shortened by two  weeks with cost savings of $18,200. 71  In Queensland, there were 4,300 premature babies in one year who did not  receive any breast milk and were therefore at greater risk for complications,  infections and longer hospital stays.72   | 
         
           | 3.50 | Interest in being a milk donor is steadily growing.73  Milk banks could also offer solutions to those mothers, such as the woman below,  who despair at having to dispose of their own excess milk, knowing that it  would be invaluable to other mothers and babies.  It was a real tragedy, I had at least 12 bottles of milk (240ml  each) in my refrigerator, and I was forced to dispose of it all down the sink  when I got home, all this liquid gold. It broke my heart to do so, especially  when I think of any premmie baby that could have really benefited from having  breast milk, as opposed to formula.74  | 
         
           | 3.51 | Mothers and babies in remote communities would  also benefit from a system which provided the infrastructure to transport breast  milk as required. With a proper courier service, the Mothers Milk Bank could  have delivered milk daily to a mother in a remote area of Queensland  whose milk supply was low and who had no access to formula.75   | 
         
           | 3.52 | A commitment to a national system of milk banks  in Australia  should not only be a stand-alone policy, but complement a range of other  measures to support breastfeeding and value of breast milk76  (see chapter 4). In Brazil,  donor milk banking goes hand in hand with efforts to promote breastfeeding as  the cultural norm.77  This  mutually reinforcing approach would help to secure the health of Australia’s  next generation for years to come.  | 
         
           | 3.53 | Recommendation 8That the Department of Health and Ageing fund a  feasibility study for a network of milk banks in Australia including the  development of a national regulatory and quality framework within which a  network of milk banks in Australia could operate. The feasibility study should  include funding pilot programs at the Mothers Milk Bank at the John Flynn  Private Hospital, Gold Coast and the King Edward Memorial Hospital milk bank in  Perth. 
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           | The economic benefits of breastfeeding | 
         
           | 3.54 | One of the committee’s main interests in  undertaking this inquiry was to investigate the short and long-term impacts on  the health of Australians if breastfeeding rates were increased. The effect of  breastfeeding on the sustainability of the health system was also examined.  | 
         
           | 3.55 | There are strong economic arguments in favour of  increasing breastfeeding rates in Australia.  As already shown in this chapter, breastfeeding and breast milk provide  well-established health benefits, including greater protection against some  chronic diseases, for both mothers and babies. These advantages should also be  viewed from an economic perspective, given that fewer cases of illness and  hospitalisations at the population level translate into significant cost savings  for the health care system.  Economists have rarely considered economic aspects of  breastfeeding, focusing their attention on the market economy. In recent years  the importance of the unpaid economy including the care work of mothers has  become more visible. It has also become evident that the policy needs to take  account of the unpaid household economy to avoid unintended impacts on the work  that families do in raising children - Australia’s ‘human capital.’
 Breastfeeding is a good example of women’s reproductive work  that is neither visible nor properly valued by existing economic statistics.  Because it is neither visible nor valued, and because it competes in the market  on unequal terms, breastfeeding remained unprotected from pressure of social and  economic change and from ‘unfair’ market competition.78
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           | 3.56 | Dr Julie Smith, a research fellow at the  Australian Centre for Economic Research on Health, has conducted a number of  studies into the economic impacts of breastfeeding in Australia. The committee  has drawn extensively on her work and the evidence she presented in the  following discussion of the economic aspects of breastfeeding.79   | 
         
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           | The economic value of breast milk and breastfeeding | 
         
           | 3.57 | A number of inquiry participants argued that the  economic value of breast milk should be recognised as a proportion of Australia’s  gross domestic product (GDP). Dr Smith  estimates that around 33 million litres of human milk per year is produced in Australia  at present breastfeeding rates.80  Using the milk bank prices in Europe, she estimates that  the value of breast milk produced by Australian women is around $2 billion per  year. The annual retail value of formula is considerably less at around $135  million.81  Breast milk’s estimated value is equivalent to around 0.5 per cent of GDP, or  six per cent of national food consumption. The impact of breastfeeding on the  economy would be even greater if exclusive breastfeeding to six months was  widely practised:  If all Australian mothers were to breastfeed as the World Health  Organization recommended, there would be an increase in economic output in the  form of milk of around $3 billion.82  | 
         
           | 3.58 | Another concern raised by some inquiry participants  was that the time invested in breastfeeding by mothers is not given economic  value in Australia.  Dr Smith  examined this ‘economic time cost’ in the nationwide Time Use Survey of New  Mothers, which showed that mothers who breastfeed to recommended levels spend  around 16 to 17 hours per week on this activity for the first three to six  months. The emotional component to breastfeeding should also be seen as a  significant human capital investment. These mothers spend an additional six to  eleven hours per week in ‘emotional care’, which contributes positively to the  child’s mental and emotional health. While the baby undoubtedly benefits from  these breastfeeding interactions, such time-intensive unpaid care on the part  of the mother is not recognised in economic terms.83   | 
         
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           | Cost savings to the health system | 
         
           | 3.59 | Breastfeeding protects against a range of  diseases and therefore has the potential to alleviate costs to the health care  system in both the short and long-term. The Australian Medical Association  notes that the potential benefits of increasing the breastfeeding rate would be  extremely cost-effective, ensuring improved health outcomes and the  sustainability of health care in Australia.84  The NHMRC states in the Dietary Guidelines that: The  total value of breastfeeding to the community makes it one of the most  cost-effective primary prevention measures available and well worth the support  of the entire community.85 | 
         
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           | Short-term impacts – economic costs of premature weaning | 
         
           | 3.60 | According to a 2002 study conducted by Dr Smith  and colleagues at the Canberra Hospital,  there are significant hospital costs associated with early weaning. It was  found that less than 10 per cent of babies in the ACT were exclusively  breastfed until the recommended six months of age. Early weaning was estimated  to add around $1 to $2 million to annual hospitalisation costs for  gastrointestinal illness, respiratory and ear infections, eczema and neonatal  necrotising enterocolitis (NEC). Using these figures, savings across the  Australian hospital system could be $60 to $120 million for these illnesses  alone.86 | 
         
           | 3.61 | A preliminary economic analysis of breastfeeding  in Australia in  1997 found that a minimum of $11.75 million could be saved if the prevalence of  exclusive breastfeeding at just three months was increased from 60 per cent to  80 per cent. This analysis only took into account four illnesses – gastroenteritis,  NEC, eczema and type 1 diabetes. The author noted that further cost savings  could be achieved if other illnesses and reduced maternal absenteeism were also  taken into account.87  | 
         
           | 3.62 | International studies have also shed light on  the extent of savings to health systems. For example, an Italian study showed  that for babies exclusively breastfed at three months, there were lower health  care costs during the first year of life because of fewer hospital admission  and ambulatory care episodes.88  A US study found that for every 1,000 babies never breastfed (compared to 1,000  babies exclusively breastfed), there were more than 2,000 extra visits to the  doctor, 212 extra days of hospitalisation and 609 extra prescriptions in the  first year of life.89   | 
         
           | 3.63 | A number of submissions also highlighted the Commonwealth  Government’s recent funding commitment of $25 million for a rotavirus vaccine. There  are around 20,000 hospital admissions every year for this common gastrointestinal  infection in children under five years old. It is suggested that an investment  of the same extent towards breastfeeding promotion could further reduce the  burden on the health system caused not only by rotavirus, but a range of common  early childhood infections.90 | 
         
           | 3.64 | These findings strengthen the case for lifting Australia’s  breastfeeding rates, given the immediate health benefits and the reduced  day-to-day strain on the health care system.  | 
         
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           | Long-term impacts – reducing the burden of chronic disease | 
         
           | 3.65 | As demonstrated earlier in this chapter,  breastfeeding can protect against the development of a number of chronic  conditions later in life, including obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular  disease. Although this is a relatively new field of inquiry, international  research suggests there are significant health system savings to be gained from  improving breastfeeding rates. For example: a 2002 study of more than 500,000 babies born in  England and Wales estimated that 33,100 asthma cases and 13,639 cases of  obesity were directly attributable to a lack of breastfeeding91 ;  andanother UK  study suggested that breastfeeding’s protective effect against high blood  pressure could prevent 3,000 coronary heart disease events and 2,000 strokes  annually in those under 75 years of age.92 
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           | 3.66 | Dr Smith  and Dr Peta   Harvey are currently investigating the links  between breastfeeding and the costs of chronic disease treatment in Australia.  Their preliminary findings suggest that between 11 and 28 per cent of the  chronic disease burden in Australia  could be attributed to a lack of breastfeeding during infancy.93   | 
         
           | 3.67 | Another factor to consider is the ongoing  special education costs arising from poor health. For example, as discussed  earlier, breastfeeding offers significant protection against middle ear  infections. Recurrent infections can lead to language and learning difficulties  in early childhood, with a need for speech therapy and remedial education  programs.94  The broader impact of chronic disease on economic productivity should also be  investigated. | 
         
           | 3.68 | It is clear that the relatively small effects  from improving breastfeeding rates among individuals can have a potentially large  impact on population health: Breastfeeding is a one off ‘intervention’ that continues to  reduce chronic disease risk throughout the life cycle. Unlike other  interventions, such as exercise programs, or dietary changes, it does not have  to be continued throughout the life cycle in order to maintain this protection,  and so has no ongoing costs. This point means that it is likely to be very cost  effective as a disease prevention measure. There are few other preventative  health interventions which have proven permanent effects in reducing risk  factors for chronic disease in such a variety of settings.95  | 
         
           | 3.69 | Thus, the committee sees merit in gathering  further evidence on the economic impacts of breastfeeding. This would strengthen  the case for government action and investment to improve breastfeeding rates in  Australia. | 
         
           | 3.70 | Recommendation 9That the Department of Health and Ageing  commission a study into the economic benefits of breastfeeding. 
 | 
       
      
       
       
         
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           | 2 | Chantry C et al, ‘Full breastfeeding  duration and associated decrease in respiratory tract infection in US  children’, Pediatrics (2006), vol  117, no 2, pp 425-432; NSW Centre for Public Health Nutrition, sub 178, p 6;  Australian Breastfeeding Association, sub 306, p 14. Back | 
         
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           | 7 | Allen J and Hector D, ‘Benefits of  Breastfeeding’, NSW Public Health  Bulletin (2005), vol 16, p 43; Der G et al, ‘Effect of breastfeeding on  intelligence in children: prospective study, sibling pairs analysis, and  meta-analysis’, British Medical Journal (2006), vol 333, pp 945-948; Jain A et al, ‘How good is the evidence linking  breastfeeding and intelligence?’, Pediatrics (2002), vol 109, pp 1044-1053; Mortensen E et al, ‘The association between  duration of breastfeeding and adult intelligence’, Journal of the American Medical Association (2002), vol 287, no 18,  pp 2365-2371; Allen J, sub 316. Back | 
         
           | 8 | Zhou S, Makrides M and Gibson R, sub 270,  p 1. Back | 
         
           | 9 | Brown L, sub 121, pp 1-2. Back | 
         
           | 10 | Allen J and Hector D, ‘Benefits of  Breastfeeding’, NSW Public Health  Bulletin (2005), vol 16, p 44; Heinig M and Dewey K, ‘Health advantages of  breastfeeding for infants’, pp 89-110; National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003), p 6. Back | 
         
           | 11 | Smith J, Harvey P, Australian Centre for  Economic Research on Health, sub 319, p 11; Allen J and Hector D, ‘Benefits of Breastfeeding’, NSW Public Health Bulletin (2005), vol  16, p 42. Back | 
         
           | 12 | National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003), p 5. Back | 
         
           | 13 | Oddy W, Telethon Institute for Child  Health Research, sub 216, pp 5-15; Harder T et al, ‘Duration of breastfeeding  and risk of overweight’, American Journal  of Epidemiology (2005), vol 162, no 5, pp 397-403; Grummer-Strawn L and Mei   Z, ‘Does breastfeeding protect against  pediatric overweight? Analysis of longitudinal data from the Centers for  Disease Control and Prevention Pediatric Nutrition Surveillance System’, Pediatrics (2004), vol 113, no 2, pp  e81-86. Back | 
         
           | 14 | Binns C, transcript, 26 March 2007, pp 14-15. Back | 
         
           | 15 | Binns   C, sub 86, pp 2-3. Back | 
         
           | 16 | Binns   C, sub 86, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 17 | Oddy W, Telethon Institute for Child  Health Research, sub 216, p 12. Back | 
         
           | 18 | Hector D, NSW Centre for Public Health  Nutrition, transcript, 4 June 2007,  p 43. Back | 
         
           | 19 | Binns   C, sub 86, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 20 | Allen J and Hector D, ‘Benefits of  Breastfeeding’, NSW Public Health  Bulletin (2005), vol 16, pp 43-44;   Oddy W, Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, sub 216, pp 5-6. Back | 
         
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           | 22 | Allen J and Hector D, ‘Benefits of  Breastfeeding’, NSW Public Health  Bulletin (2005), vol 16, p 43; Heinig   M and Dewey   K, ‘Health effects of breastfeeding for  mothers’, NSW Public Health Bulletin (2005),  vol 16, pp 41-42. Back | 
         
           | 23 | Bernier M et al, ‘Breastfeeding and risk  of breast cancer: a meta-analysis of published studies’, Human Reproduction Update (2000), vol 6, no 4, pp 374-386; Lipworth  L et al, ‘History of breastfeeding in relation to breast cancer risk: a review  of the epidemiologic literature’, Journal  of the National Cancer Institute (2000), vol 19, no 4, pp 302-312; Heinig M  and Dewey K, ‘Health effects of breastfeeding for mothers’, p 43. Back | 
         
           | 24 | Beral V, ‘Breastfeeding: collaborative  reanalysis of individual data for 47 epidemiological studies in 30 countries,  including 50,302 women with breast cancer and 96,973 women without the  disease’, The Lancet (2002), vol 360,  pp 187-195; Dyson T,  sub 32, pp1-2. Back | 
         
           | 25 | Heinig   M and Dewey   K, ‘Health effects of breastfeeding for  mothers’, pp 38-41. Back | 
         
           | 26 | Tung K et al, ‘Reproductive factors and  epithelial ovarian cancer risk by histologic type: a multiethnic case-control  study’, American Journal of Epidemiology (2003),  vol 158, no 7, pp 629-638; Newcomb P and Trentham-Dietz A, ‘Breastfeeding  practices in relation to endometrial cancer risk, USA’, Cancer Causes and Control (2000), vol 11, no 7, pp 663-667. Back | 
         
           | 27 | Polatti F et al, ‘Bone mineral changes  during and after lactation’, Obstetrics  and Gynaecology (1999), vol 94, no 1, pp 52-56. Back | 
         
           | 28 | Karlson E et al, ‘Do breastfeeding and  other reproductive factors influence future risk of rheumatoid arthritis?’, Arthritis and Rheumatism (2004), vol 50,  pp 3458-3467. Back | 
         
           | 29 | Steube A et al, ‘Duration of lactation and  incidence of type 2 diabetes’, Journal of  the American Medical Association (2005), vol 294, pp 2601-2610. Back | 
         
           | 30 | College of Lactation Consultants Victoria  Inc, sub 158, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 31 | National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003), p 7; Australian College of Midwives,  Baby Friendly Health Initiative, sub 185, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 32 | Mezzacappa   E, ‘Breastfeeding and maternal stress  response and health’, Nutrition Reviews (2004),  vol 62, pp 261-268; Hoyle Z, Post and Antenatal Depression Association,  transcript, 7 June 2007, pp  58-64. Back | 
         
           | 33 | Oddy W, Telethon Institute for Child  Health Research, sub 216, pp 16-18. Back | 
         
           | 34 | National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003),pp  4-5. Back | 
         
           | 35 | Stockwell   D, Food Standards Australia New Zealand, transcript, 13 June 2007, p 11. Back | 
         
           | 36 | Oddy W, ‘Breastfeeding protects against  illness and infection in infants and children: a review of the evidence’, Breastfeeding Review (2001), vol 9, no  2, p 15. Back | 
         
           | 37 | National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003), p 4. Back | 
         
           | 38 | Wagner C, ‘Human milk and lactation’,  eMedicine, 2006, viewed on 30 July   2007 at http://www.emedicine.com/ped/topic2594.htm. Back | 
         
           | 39 | Wagner C, ‘Human milk and lactation’,  eMedicine, 2006, viewed on 30 July 2007 at http://www.emedicine.com/ped/topic2594.htm. Back | 
         
           | 40 | Hector D, NSW Centre for Public Health and  Nutrition, transcript, 4 June 2007,  p 43. Back | 
         
           | 41 | Werner C, sub 6, pp 2-3; Jeffery L, sub  34, p 3; Wighton M, sub 41, p 2; Pollock R, sub 60, p 1; Trinder M, sub 128, p  1; Tattam A, sub 199, pp 2-3; Australian Nursing Federation, sub 271, p 3;  Pharmacy Guild of Australia, sub 331, p 2; Bowen M, sub 337, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 42 | Dixon G, sub 30, p 2; Binns C, sub 86, p  2; O’Dowd Y, sub 33, p 2; David Q, sub 37, p 1; Rothenbury A, sub 87, p 2; Hay  L, sub 153, p 5; Day S, sub 157, p 2; Marazakis M, sub 202, p 1; Australian  Breastfeeding Association (Queensland Branch), sub 207, p 3; Stephenson C, sub  278, p 1. Back | 
         
           | 43 | Walsh A, sub 20, p 1; Ward K, sub 56, p 2;  Christoff A, sub 72, p 2; Dawson P, sub 98, p 2; Mathewson S, sub 111, p 2;  Hinkley T, sub 115, p 1; Buckley M, sub 160, p 1; Eldridge S, sub 214, p 3;  Fuller R, sub 228, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 44 | Binns   C, sub 86, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 45 | National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003), p 14. Back | 
         
           | 46 | Lording R, sub 186, p 7. Back | 
         
           | 47 | WHO Global strategy for infant and young  child feeding, 2002, viewed on 30 July   2007 at http://www.who.int/nutrition/publications/gs_infant_feeding_text_eng.pdf,  p 10. Back | 
         
           | 48 | Arnold L, ‘Global health policies that  support the use of banked donor human milk: a human rights issue’, International Breastfeeding Journal (2006), vol 1, no 26, pp 5-6. Back | 
         
           | 49 | WHO/UNICEF Joint Resolution, 1980, quoted  in Wight N, ‘Donor Human Milk for Preterm Infants’, Journal of Perinatology (2001), vol 21, p 251. Back | 
         
           | 50 | Human Milk Banking Association of North  America, ‘The History of Milk Banking’, 2003, viewed on 30 July 2007 at http://www.hmbana.org/index.php?mode=history. Back | 
         
           | 51 | 
             Lording R, ‘A review of human milk banking  and public health policy in Australia’, Breastfeeding Review ( 2006), vol 14,  no 3, p 22; Wight, p 251. Back | 
         
           | 52 | Moorhead  A, Royal Women’s Hospital, Melbourne,  transcript, 7 June 2007, p  31. Back | 
         
           | 53 | Lucas   A and Cole   TJ, ‘Breast milk and neonatal necrotising  enterocolitis’, The Lancet, (1990),  vol 336, pp 1519-1523. Back | 
         
           | 54 | Eldridge   S, sub 214, p 9. Back | 
         
           | 55 | Lording R, ‘A review of human milk  banking’, p 23. Back | 
         
           | 56 | Arnold L, p 7 (note, adjusted to AUD). Back | 
         
           | 57 | Moorhead  A, Royal Women’s Hospital, Melbourne,  transcript, 7 June 2007, p  31. Back | 
         
           | 58 | Lording R, ‘A review of human milk  banking’, p 23. Back | 
         
           | 59 | Jones J and Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank,  transcript, 18 April 2007,  p 8. Back | 
         
           | 60 | Community statements, transcript, 18 April 2007, pp 46-47. Back | 
         
           | 61 | Community statements, transcript, 18 April 2007, pp 49-50; McMaster D,  transcript, 18 April 2007,  p 41. Back | 
         
           | 62 | McMaster D, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 42. Back | 
         
           | 63 | Lording R, ‘A review of human milk  banking’, pp 25-26. Back | 
         
           | 64 | Lording R, ‘A review of human milk  banking’, pp 25-26; Schmidt P, Gold Coast   Hospital, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 36. Back | 
         
           | 65 | Lording R, ‘A review of human milk  banking’, p 26; Schmidt P, Gold Coast Hospital, transcript, 18 April 2007, pp  35-36. Back | 
         
           | 66 | Lording R, ‘A review of human milk  banking’, p 26; Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 5. Back | 
         
           | 67 | Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 3. Back | 
         
           | 68 | NSW  Health, sub 479, p 35. Back | 
         
           | 69 | Eldridge M, sub 25, p 2; Cheers A, sub 29,  p 6; Dixon G, sub 30, p 2; Long H, sub 80, p1; Moore E, sub 102, p 2; Beyer L,  sub 105, p 1; MacDonald H, sub 106, p 1; Clements F, sub 122, p 5; Dickson E,  sub 162, p 2; Public Health Association of Australia, sub 181, p 10; Australian  College of Midwives, Baby Friendly Health Initiative, sub 185, p 13; Lording R,  sub 186, pp 7-8; Eldridge S, sub 214, p 8; Australian Breastfeeding  Association, New South Wales Branch, sub 276, p 13; Australian Breastfeeding  Association, sub 306, p 28; Women’s Electoral Lobby, sub 310, p 5; New South  Wales Baby Friendly Health Initiative, sub 339, p 15; de Vries L, sub 359, p 2;  Campbell A, sub 361, p 2; Martin P, sub 373, p 1; Cuff S, sub 382, p 1;  Brittain H, Logan Hospital, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 31. Back | 
         
           | 70 | Moody G, Australian Lactation Consultants  Association, transcript, 4 June 2007,  p 34. Back | 
         
           | 71 | Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank, transcript, 18 April 2007, pp 2-3. Back | 
         
           | 72 | Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank, transcript, 18 April 2007, pp 2-3. Back | 
         
           | 73 | Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank, transcript, 18  April 2007, p 9; Jeffery L, sub 34, p 5; Greenlees N, sub 324, pp 1-2; Robins  J, sub 50, p 1; Virgo H, sub 155, p 1; Fellows M, sub 304, p 2; Nielsen L, sub  355, p 2; community statements, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 47; community  statements, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 49. Back | 
         
           | 74 | Smith A, sub 110, p 2; Back | 
         
           | 75 | Ryan M, Mothers Milk Bank, transcript, 18 April 2007, p 7. Back | 
         
           | 76 | Lording R, sub 186, p 8. Back | 
         
           | 77 | Arnold L, ‘Global health policies’, p 7. Back | 
         
           | 78 | Smith J, Australian Centre for Economic  Research on Health, sub 313, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 79 | Smith J, Australian Centre for Economic  Research on Health, sub 313; Smith J, Harvey P, Australian Centre for Economic  Research on Health, sub 319. Back | 
         
           | 80 | Smith J, transcript, 26 March 2007, p 18. Back | 
         
           | 81 | Smith J, Australian Centre for Economic  Research on Health, sub 313, p 4. Back | 
         
           | 82 | Smith J, transcript, 26 March 2007, p 26 Back | 
         
           | 83 | Smith J, Australian Centre for Economic  Research on Health, sub 313, p 9; Smith J, transcript, 26 March 2007, pp 22-23. Back | 
         
           | 84 | Australian Medical Association, sub 358, p  2. Back | 
         
           | 85 | National Health & Medical Research  Council, Dietary Guidelines for Children  and Adolescents in Australia (2003), p 14. Back | 
         
           | 86 | Smith J et al, ‘Hospital system costs of  artificial infant feeding: estimates for the Australian    Capital Territory’, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health (2002), vol 26,  no 6, pp 543-551. Back | 
         
           | 87 | Drane   D, ‘Breastfeeding and formula feeding: a  preliminary economic analysis’, Breastfeeding  Review (1997), vol 5, no 1, pp 7-15. Back | 
         
           | 88 | Cattaneo A et al, ‘Infant feeding and the  cost of health care’, Acta Paediatrica (2006),  vol 95, no 5, pp 540-546. Back | 
         
           | 89 | Ball T and Wright A, ‘Health care costs of  formula-feeding in the first year of life’, Pediatrics (1999), vol 103, no 4, pp 870-876. Back | 
         
           | 90 | Clements F, sub 122, p 4; Davis A, sub  237, pp 1-2; Gribble K, School of Nursing, University of Western Sydney, sub  251, p 2; Davis A, sub 367, p 1. Back | 
         
           | 91 | Akobeng   A and Heller R, ‘Assessing the population  impact of low rates of breastfeeding on asthma, coeliac disease and obesity:  the use of a new statistical method’, Archives  of Disease in Childhood (2007), vol 92, pp 483-485. Back | 
         
           | 92 | Martin   R et al, ‘Breastfeeding in  infancy and blood pressure in later life: systematic review and meta-analysis’, American Journal of Epidemiology (2005),  vol 161, no 1, pp 15-26. Back | 
         
           | 93 | Smith J, Harvey P, Australian Centre for  Economic Research on Health, sub 319, p 2. Back | 
         
           | 94 | Australian Breastfeeding Association, sub  306, p 10. Back | 
         
           | 95 | Smith J, Harvey P, Australian Centre for  Economic Research on Health, sub 319, p 7. Back |