
Patrick, a premature baby weighing a minuscule 1.2 kilos
(2.65 pounds), was "saved" by a breast milk bank in South Africa,
where child mortality is high despite being the continent's most developed
economy.
"It was a question of life and death because of the
fact he could not go on formula," said his 39-year-old mother Annerleigh
Bartlett. "There was no way. He was too little."
Bartlett, from Cape Town, wasn't producing her own milk yet,
and the formula can damage premature babies' intestines.

So, for the first two weeks of his life, Patrick relied for his
survival on breast milk donated by anonymous women.
The principle of milk banks is simple: mothers donate milk,
which is tested, pasteurised, then delivered to babies in need.
"Every drop counts," said a poster at the
headquarters of the South African Breastmilk Reserve (SABR), a network of milk
banks which supply 87 hospitals and feed over 2,800 children this year.
"Human milk banks should be promoted and supported as
an effective approach to reduce... mortality for babies who cannot be
breastfed," said South Africa's ministry of health in a recent report.
"South Africa has a much higher nutrition problem than
countries at comparable income levels."
South Africa's infant mortality rate was 32.8 deaths per
1,000 births in 2013 -- far higher than countries such as Egypt, Algeria or
Indonesia.
Children who are exclusively breastfed are 14 times more
likely to survive in the first six months of life than formula-fed children,
according to the United Nations Children's Fund, UNICEF.
But South Africa has very low breastfeeding rates at just
7.4 percent, partly as a result of prevalent poverty and effective marketing by
baby formula companies

Soon after having their babies, many poor mothers need to
get working again.
"Many of these moms are not employed in the formal
sector. They don't get maternity benefits," said Chantell Witten,
researcher at the North West University Center of Excellence for Nutrition in
South Africa.
"It means that moms are not with their baby, so they
start formula feed.
"These babies don't get the right formula because moms
can't afford to feed adequately and appropriately."
There is also a pervasive belief in South Africa that
formula milk is better for the baby.
"A lot of poor people think that rich people
formula-feed. They aspire for the best for their children," said Stasha
Jordan, SABR's director, describing some of the marketing for formula as
"aggressive".
Until 2011, formula was distributed for free to prevent
transmission of HIV from mother to child, another factor leading towards a bias
to using formula over milk.
But experts say attitudes towards breast milk are changing.
Baby formula advertisements have been banned in magazines
and billboards since 2012 and South Africa now encourages HIV-positive mothers
to breastfeed as long as they are taking antiretrovirals.
Still, there is some way to go.
"First we were very uncomfortable, knowing that it is a
fluid from someone else," said Pradesh Mewalala, whose twins Anya and
Ariana were born prematurely.

Mewalala eventually agreed to use the milk, a decision that
saved his daughters.
The milk undergoes strict microbiological screening and
donors must take AIDS and Hepatitis B tests.
Patrick is now a vibrant six-month-old baby. Eventually, his
mother was able to breastfeed.
It's now her turn to be a donor at the Milk Matters
bank in Cape Town.
"I needed to pay back the institution that helped me
and our child kind of survive," said Bartlett.
"I managed to provide three litres of milk... to assist
with feeding 20 babies for a period of 24 hours."
Source: AFP
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