Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Marianne Mollmann

GET UPDATES FROM Marianne Mollmann
 

Bloomberg's Breastfeeding Initiative: Let's Start With Paid Parental Leave...

Posted: 08/08/2012 4:57 pm

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has again been the focus of criticism for promoting a "nanny state," this time for his initiative to further breastfeeding by preventing hospitals from displaying and promoting breast milk substitutes. The many voices in the outpouring of criticism that followed the unveiling of Bloomberg's new plan are right about one thing: Most women's decision to breastfeed is not determined by where and whether hospitals display breast milk substitutes on their shelves. But most criticism has focused on a somewhat illusionary notion: choice.

And by this I don't mean that women in the United States have no choice in the matter -- obviously, we do.

What I mean is that choices, everywhere, are determined by our circumstances. When a substantially larger percentage of women in Western European countries, as compared to the United States, consistently choose to breastfeed and to continue to breastfeed past three months, logic has it that circumstances in those countries facilitate the healthier choice (which, undisputedly, in most cases is continued and exclusive breastfeeding for at least six months).

And what are those circumstances?

Here's a hint: It's not that European countries hide breast milk substitutes on the back shelves far away from maternity wards. Sure, many hospitals in Europe aggressively discourage bottle-feeding, but breast milk substitutes are freely available and the shaming of non-breastfeeding mothers -- which many critics of Bloomberg's initiative rightly point to as counterproductive -- is no more or less strong than in the United States.

The fact that more women breastfeed in Europe is also not an indication of European women lagging behind their American sisters in terms of emancipation and modern living. If true, this might make European women more likely to live traditional homemaker lives with time to breastfeed. Women in Europe face different, not more, obstacles to equality than women in the United States. The pay gap between men and women has long been less pronounced in Europe than in the United States, whereas legal protections against sexual harassment are stronger in the United States than in most European countries.

Many of those who criticize Bloomberg's initiative refer to the fact that some women just can't breastfeed, and they shouldn't be made to think they are lesser or worse mothers because of it. And, yes, that is obviously an issue. Some women just do not produce milk, regardless of how long and how well they teach their newborns to suckle. But it would be facile (and, frankly, naïve) to conclude from the difference in breastfeeding statistics that substantially fewer women living in the United States are physically able to breastfeed. There is, after all, nothing in the water (one would hope) that so systematically impairs our bodily functions.

There is, however, something in our laws. The key difference between Europe and the United States when it comes to breastfeeding are legal protections of paid parental leave, paid sick leave and, in some cases allowances for longer lunch hours to breastfeed.

Consider this: in Denmark, where I gave birth and started breastfeeding my daughter, women have a right to at least 46 weeks paid leave after birth (unless your union got you a better deal). After living seven months in Peru (where women are entitled by law to 90 days paid leave to be taken before or after birth, and an additional one-hour break for breastfeeding while at work until the new baby is six months old), I moved to the United States for a full-time job. My daughter was then eight months old and had until then been exclusively breastfed.

My conditions were comparatively good. I had an office with a lock on the door and I could organize my meetings and other work around the regular pumping I needed to do to maintain the flow of milk. Crucially, there was a fridge where I could store the pumped milk to later bring home to my daughter. Even so, my milk production, which had until then been copious, all but seized in a few months, largely due to the difficulties in keeping a rigorously regular pumping (and water intake) schedule and -- who am I kidding -- the physical discomfort the pumping caused. And I am not alone. Many women find it hard to keep up a steady breast milk supply when returning to work after time at home.

So imagine what might happen to a new mother without such discretionary protection and with only the narrow extended (and unpaid) sick leave afforded by the law. She'd be back to work after 12 weeks (or less) of unpaid leave, often have no place to pump, no allowance for time to pump and no place to store the milk.

Equally to the point, the oddly myopic view of what's at stake in the breastfeeding debate that was displayed in last week's criticism of Bloomberg's initiative suggests that new mothers enjoy little understanding from co-workers, employers or even those claiming to represent women's best interests.

At best, we are encouraged to feel empowered in rejecting breastfeeding and Mayor Bloomberg's blame politics. At worst, we are told bottle-feeding is the price we pay for equality. The former is a limited read of reality, while the latter is just plain wrong. There are more effective ways than blame and coercion to encourage healthy breastfeeding for women who want to lactate and are physically able to do so, starting with paid parental leave.

This article was first published on RHRealityCheck.org

 

Follow Marianne Mollmann on Twitter: www.twitter.com/cluelesscamper

FOLLOW CANADA POLITICS
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has again been the focus of criticism for promoting a "nanny state," this time for his initiative to further breastfeeding by preventing hospitals from displaying...
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has again been the focus of criticism for promoting a "nanny state," this time for his initiative to further breastfeeding by preventing hospitals from displaying...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 20
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
03:35 AM on 09/04/2012
again the old guard attempting to take the women back to the middle ages
01:59 PM on 08/21/2012
Does anyone else wish Bloomberg would quit politics and become Batman???
01:54 PM on 08/21/2012
Ahh this whole issue is SOOO irritating! This initiative in no way inhibits a female's choice! Breast feeding is well accepted in the medical community as being the best, HEALTHIEST way to feed a baby and yet hospitals continue to subtly encourage formula use (some even sending home new mothers with it). Bloomberg made it a point to say that it is the mother's choice and this initiative is not meant to judge those who do not breast feed (be it due to their career, medical reasons, or whatever other plausible cause), but it is a FACT that breast feeding is the best choice FOR THE BABY. Can one really argue that a health care professional making a new mother aware of the facts of breast feeding (this too goes for mothers who should NOT breast feed due to a disease/drug problem) is inhibiting their ability to choose for themselves? When they say to eat three meals and get 8 hours of sleep is that taking away our freedom to decide as well???

I feel bad for the women who blindly oppose this because they have been TOLD it dis-empowers them....oh the irony.... >.
12:59 PM on 08/12/2012
If women do not take NOW this chance to speak up and say NO MORE to someone else controlling their VOICE, their BODIES, thier, MINDS, and now the ultimate- their CHILDREN, we have NOT COME A LONG WAY BABY!!

This has nothing to do with health and trying to be kind it is about CONTROL.. if you do not see that we have lost all we have accomplished in such a short time and are not worthy of where we have come and maybe do need to be guided as some so see.

The Line has been drawn ladies, you can either be pushed over or stand firm, the choice is yours!
05:03 PM on 08/10/2012
Look to Quebec for what can happen when governments support families. The number of children per family has increased, the number of women in the workforce has increased, and results in smarter kids:
Highlights of Quebec’s family policy:
$1.6 billion supports 361,533 child care spaces (2012 target). Quebec’s early childhood system has
influenced:
• Quebec child poverty rates have declined 50% in the last 10 years.
• School test scores have gone from among the lowest to the highest in Canada.
http://www.childcareontario.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/Overview-Quebecs-Child-and-Family-Policies1.pdf
• Outside Alberta, Quebec is the only province to see an increase in its birth rate
• More than one in two Quebec fathers take paid leave after the birth of their babies, compared to
the 11% of fathers in the rest of the country.
• Maternal labour force participation went from the lowest to the highest in Canada
• Post secondary enrolment of women is now the highest in the country.
• Tax revenues from mothers now cover 40% of the cost of the program.
05:02 PM on 08/10/2012
It seems like the only way to get the attention of some people is to put a dollar value on things, except that those who think in that way, seldom think 20 or 30 years down the road.

Healthy children and stable families are a big money saver to society at large. The investment of maternity leave is a small price to pay for those bonuses. In Canada, the "paid" maternity leave is part of EI, and those who get the leave have already paid into the system, and by making returning to work in 6 months or a year an easy and reliable process, your trained, EI contributing worker is back on the job, with a generally healthier kid as a bonus. Strangely, those who do not wish to support their current neighbours in raising more citizens are often the same ones who complain when immigrants come to perform the jobs that might have been filled by kids born in the country, if it had been financially viable to do so for citizens here.

Our governments insist that we move to the work, but that means leaving behind the larger family support systems, but at the same time, they refuse to assist in replacing those support systems such as helping new moms and instituting government day-cares. If you try to have it both ways, something generally suffers. Usually its the kids.
02:39 PM on 08/10/2012
Back in the day, when a woman gave birth mothers, sisters, aunts would all converge on the new mother and cook, clean, watch the other children. There were often wet nurses to assist if a woman had difficulty nursing. Breastfeeding does not just happen, it takes up to 4-6 weeks, sometimes more to properly establish a milk supply. The nursing debate is about giving women the tools-if they choose- to nourish their infant the way nature intended. Stress is a huge factor on the production of milk. When a new mother comes home to all her previous duties her stress is compounded by lack of income if unpaid leave, exhaustion, baby not latching. I guess only rich women should be the bearers of our future generations.
05:54 PM on 08/09/2012
Breastfeeding is a joke unless you have a support system, which many women do not have.
04:52 PM on 08/09/2012
spot on.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
msoverall
I think, therefore I'm not a Republican!
04:39 PM on 08/09/2012
How about if you can't give birth and don't have breasts (YOU ARE A MAN) you keep your mouth shut and your opinions to yourself. Yes, I mean you Mr. Mayor.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:13 AM on 08/09/2012
DEMOCRATES OPPOSE BREAST FEEDING
09:49 AM on 08/09/2012
It always amazes me to see how "anti-family" this country really is. It feels like every decision is always about the almighty dollar no matter what the cost is to a person's health (mental or physical) or the family life. When there are articles about wages, time spent at work, working conditions etc...people immediately start screaming about higher tax dollars and costs to the employers. The citizens of this country are apparently no better than a herd of cattle...staying in our nice confined space, eating our hay, and don't ask for anything better. Capitalism at its best.
I for one would have loved to see my wife able to stay at home longer than the 12 weeks she had with our children. I think it is better for the health of her and the child. As a country we might want to consider making some fundemental changes in how we look at things...stop focusing so much on the "quantities" in life and more on the "qualities" of life.
02:37 AM on 08/09/2012
thats a long vacation you want...with pay.............
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sickofitinca
01:54 AM on 08/09/2012
Here is a great idea. go to Denmark and become a citizen there. You then get pregnant and about 8 months pregnant you fly to the United States and have your baby so it can be a US Citizen. Then fly back to Denmark and get your 46 weeks off.

Problem solved.
01:00 AM on 08/09/2012
Paid time off so you can decide to have a baby is sure to do one thing: Make it even more unattractive for employers to hire women.