• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Thursday, September 4, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Building Real Support For Breastfeeding Mothers Beyond The First Cry

by Ngozi Ibe
1 month ago
in News
xr:d:DAFrRVFnxLY:4,j:5507176140098564238,t:23081413

xr:d:DAFrRVFnxLY:4,j:5507176140098564238,t:23081413

Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

World Breastfeeding Week, observed globally from August 1st to 7th, is not just about nourishing newborns. It’s a reminder that breastfeeding is a lifelong foundation for health and wellbeing.

Advertisement

This year’s theme, “Closing the Gap: Support for Breastfeeding,” shifts the focus toward building a supportive, stigma-free environment where mothers are empowered to start and continue breastfeeding on their own terms. It’s a call to action for workplaces, communities, and healthcare systems to actively remove the barriers that make breastfeeding harder than it needs to be. True support goes beyond the early days, it means recognising breastfeeding as a shared responsibility, not just a personal choice.

The benefits of breastfeeding are unmatched. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life can prevent up to 820,000 child deaths globally each year.

Breast milk is not only the ideal source of nutrition for infants, it strengthens their immune systems and significantly reduces the risk of infections and diseases like diarrhea and pneumonia. Mothers also benefit, with studies showing lower risks of breast and ovarian cancers, type 2 diabetes, and postpartum depression.

Despite these well-documented advantages, only 29 percent of Nigerian children under six months are exclusively breastfed, according to UNICEF. Behind this figure lies a complex web of barriers, systemic, cultural, and personal, that many mothers confront daily, especially when meaningful support is lacking.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Mother’s Story: Navigating Support And Stigma

While statistics tell part of the story, the lived experiences of mothers reveal a far more complex reality.

Uju Nkeonyem, a stay-at-home mother, shared her breastfeeding journey with Health Situations. For her, producing breast milk came easily but the demands of round-the-clock care took a toll.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Breastfeeding wasn’t hard for me because God blessed me with flowing breast milk. But waking up at night for feeds was extra work. I would be so tired from the day that all I wanted was sleep, but I didn’t have that luxury. Most nights, I barely got four hours of sleep, and it messed with my entire day.”

Uju credited her family’s support, particularly her husband, who bought her a rocking chair to make night feeds more comfortable. Still, she faced intense pressure from others.

“Older women made me drink things I didn’t want, and insisted the baby was hungry every time she cried even when I knew better,” she recalled.

“After six months, society makes you feel like a jobless mother for continuing to breastfeed. They even tell you you’re feeding your child poison. It’s so discouraging.”

Her reflections cut to the heart of the issue.

“Apart from hospital lectures, there’s very little real support for nursing mothers. I’d say only thirty percent get true encouragement these days. The only thing I’d change is for everyone to let mothers do what works for them.”

This story reflects the reality of countless mothers across Nigeria. Beyond the biological demands of breastfeeding, they must navigate cultural myths, unsolicited advice, and the pressure of balancing personal well-being with the needs of their babies.

Breastfeeding is often framed as a mother’s responsibility alone, but this perspective is deeply flawed. Mothers cannot and should not do it all by themselves. Support is essential, at home, in workplaces, and within communities.

For many women, returning to work marks the abrupt end of breastfeeding. Without breastfeeding-friendly workplaces, many mothers are forced to stop earlier than intended. WHO notes that paid maternity leave of at least eighteen weeks and access to breastfeeding breaks can significantly increase breastfeeding rates. Yet, few workplaces in Nigeria implement these policies effectively.

RELATED

US Judge ‘Blocks’ Trump’s Executive Order On Birthright Citizenship, Says ‘It’s Unconstitutional’

Washington Sues Trump, US Military Over National Guard Deployment

56 seconds ago
JUST-IN: IGP Appoints Lagos PPRO Hundeyin As New Police Spokesman 

JUST-IN: IGP Appoints Lagos PPRO Hundeyin As New Police Spokesman 

19 minutes ago

Communities also need to challenge harmful stereotypes. When women are shamed for breastfeeding beyond six months or pressured into practices that don’t align with their child’s needs, they are robbed of their confidence as mothers. Public campaigns must focus as much on education and empathy as they do on technical knowledge.

 

What Can We Do?

Normalise Conversations: Talking about breastfeeding openly helps break myths and stigma. When fathers, siblings, and extended family understand the importance of breastfeeding, they can provide better support.

Support Mothers Practically: From sharing night feeds to providing household help, small gestures can make a significant difference for nursing mothers.

Advocate for Policy Change: Push for maternity protections in workplaces, provision of lactation rooms, and government policies that promote breastfeeding as a national priority.

 

Create Supportive Networks: Communities can establish mother-to-mother groups or “period banks” of breastfeeding supplies and information for new mothers.

 

 

Breastfeeding is not just a maternal duty, it is a collective responsibility. We must foster environments where mothers feel empowered to nourish their babies without fear, shame, or undue hardship.

 

 

 

As Uju Nkeonyem’s story makes clear, closing the gap goes far beyond hospital lectures. It calls for a shift in how families, workplaces, and communities perceive and support breastfeeding. It means lifting the societal pressure that undermines mothers and allowing them the freedom to do what’s best for their children without judgment.

 

 

 

This World Breastfeeding Week, let’s move beyond awareness and commit to real, practical support. Because when we close the gap for breastfeeding, we’re not just protecting the health of babies we’re strengthening the well-being of mothers, families, and the society they help build.


Join Our WhatsApp Channel



SendShare10167Tweet6355Share
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

The Perfect Nutritious Crepe For Breakfast

Next Post

Abure-led Labour Party Faults INEC On Party’s Omission In By-election

Ngozi Ibe

Ngozi Ibe

You May Like

US Judge ‘Blocks’ Trump’s Executive Order On Birthright Citizenship, Says ‘It’s Unconstitutional’
News

Washington Sues Trump, US Military Over National Guard Deployment

2025/09/04
JUST-IN: IGP Appoints Lagos PPRO Hundeyin As New Police Spokesman 
News

JUST-IN: IGP Appoints Lagos PPRO Hundeyin As New Police Spokesman 

2025/09/04
Centre Laments Poor Presence Of CNG Outlets In North
Business

CNG Pump Price Increase Not On Federal Government’s Directive — PiCNG

2025/09/04
IGP Orders Investigations Into Plateau Killings
News

Tinubu Hails Egbetokun’s Reforms, Dedication At Birthday

2025/09/04
Alaafin Harps On Unity Among Traditional Rulers
News

Alaafin Harps On Unity Among Traditional Rulers

2025/09/04
Adeyanju Mourns Akeredolu, Urges Leaders To Stop Illegality
News

Adeyanju Hails Tinubu, DSS Boss Over Arraignment Of Suspects In Benue, Plateau Killings

2025/09/04
Leadership Conference advertisement

LATEST

Washington Sues Trump, US Military Over National Guard Deployment

JUST-IN: IGP Appoints Lagos PPRO Hundeyin As New Police Spokesman 

CNG Pump Price Increase Not On Federal Government’s Directive — PiCNG

Tinubu Hails Egbetokun’s Reforms, Dedication At Birthday

Alaafin Harps On Unity Among Traditional Rulers

Adeyanju Hails Tinubu, DSS Boss Over Arraignment Of Suspects In Benue, Plateau Killings

Plateau Government Winning War Against Substandard Drugs, Says Agency DG

2027: Governor Sule Warns Aspirants Against Early Campaigns

Italian Fashion Designer, Giorgio Armani, Dies At 91

Publishers Risk Market Loss Without ISBN, ISSN — National Library

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.