[attach id=236996 size="medium"]In East Asia and the Pacific, the number of breastfeeding mothers has fallen from 45 per cent in 2006 to 29 per cent in 2012. One reason may include marketing activity which violates the internationally agreed code for marketing of breast milk substitutes.[/attach]

The lives of 95 babies could be saved every hour – 830,000 a year – if new mothers started breastfeeding their newborns in the “power hour” immediately after the birth, a charity said yesterday.

If babies receive colostrum – the mother’s first milk – within an hour of birth, it will kick-start the child’s immune system, making them three times more likely to survive, according to a report by Save the Children.

If the mother continues feeding for the next six months, then a child growing up in the developing world is up to 15 times less likely to die from killer diseases such as pneumonia and diarrhoea, the Superfood for Babies report says.

According to the charity, the enormous progress already made in reducing child mortality could be accelerated if more mothers were encouraged to breastfeed.

Despite the startling statistics, global breastfeeding rates are stalling and actually declining across East Asia and in some of Africa’s most populous countries such as Ethiopia and Nigeria.

The prevalence of traditional practices, as well as a severe shortage of health workers and examples of inappropriate marketing techniques by some baby milk substitute companies, have contributed to this.

Justin Forsyth, Save the Children chief executive, said: “Despite the benefits of breastfeeding being widely known in the developed world, and it being a free, natural way to protect a newborn baby, too little attention is being paid to help mums breastfeed in poorer countries.”

If mums were helped to breastfeed for up to six months, many more children would be protected from killer diseases like pneumonia and diarrhoea

The charity believes four key factors are to blame: a lack of empowerment and education for women; severe shortages of midwives and health workers in the developing world; lack of adequate maternity legislation; and marketing practices by some breast milk substitute companies.

In East Asia and the Pacific, the number of breastfeeding mothers has fallen from 45 per cent in 2006 to 29 per cent in 2012.

New research by the charity in Asia found mothers who cited examples of marketing activity which violate the internationally agreed code for marketing of breast-milk substitutes.

The charity says women who give birth with the help of skilled birth attendants are twice as likely to breastfeed in the first crucial hour and that plugging a critical gap of 3.5 million health workers would dramatically increase the number of breastfeeding mums.

Forsyth said: “If every baby was fed during the first hour of life – what we call the ‘power hour’ – we estimate that up to 830,000 newborn deaths could be prevented every year; that’s 95 babies every hour.

“And if mums were helped to breastfeed for up to six months, many more children would be protected from killer diseases like pneumonia and diarrhoea. It is a matter of life and death.”

The charity says that stopping children from dying from preventable disease and hunger is possible in our lifetime but only if world leaders step up their fight with greater funding for malnutrition, and breastfeeding in particular.

Forsyth added: “The world is at tipping point and we could be the generation to stop children dying from preventable disease and malnutrition.

“This year’s G8 – with the UK in the driving seat – is a once-in-a lifetime opportunity to focus effort on a final push to end hunger.”

The charity is calling on the UK Government to use its hunger summit and G8 presidency in June to fund nutrition work with breastfeeding and for other donor countries to step up their funding for nutrition.

It also wants breast-milk substitute companies to increase health warnings that formula is inferior to breast milk to cover one-third of its packaging.

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