Reducing HIV risk in breastfeeding
PLUSNEWS 2004-11-04
For many HIV-positive mothers in resource-poor settings, breastfeeding
is often the only option, despite the risk of HIV transmission. The
challenge now is for healthcare workers to accept this reality and make
breastfeeding safer, a recent report has said.
A study by LINKAGES, a programme providing technical information on infant feeding, found that breastfeeding remained one of the most
effective child survival interventions available.
While breastfeeding increases the risk of HIV-transmission to the child by up to 15 percent, replacing breast milk increases the risk of 
infectious diseases like diarrhoea and respiratory infections up to  sixfold during the child's first 2 months.
A UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) statement on breastfeeding noted: When  replacement feeding is acceptable, feasible, affordable, sustainable 
and safe, avoidance of all breastfeeding by HIV-positive women is recommended.
Formula feeding reduces the risk of HIV transmission through breast  milk by one-third, but this option requires a constant supply of clean
water and firewood to ensure sterile feeding. Family and community  pressure to breastfeed is strong, and mothers who formula feed are 
often viewed with suspicion.
According to the LINKAGES report, the risk of HIV transmission through breastfeeding can be reduced by mothers following feeding guidelines,
as well as taking care of their own health.
Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months is one of the report's recommendations, as mixed feeding can damage the baby's fragile gut 
lining, increasing the risk of infection.
It sounds like hard work but it is not impossible. This is also the  best feeding practice for mothers who don't know their status or are 
not [HIV] positive, Anna Coutsoudis, a researcher in the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health at the University of Natal's Nelson R 
Mandela School of Medicine, told PlusNews.
Coutsoudis has developed Africa's first community-based 'breast-milk  bank' for babies orphaned by HIV/AIDS, but governments and healthcare
facilities also had to play a part. They should be putting more money into breastfeeding promotion because everybody benefits not just HIV-positive mothers, she said.
One of the spin-offs of educating women in safer breastfeeding would be fewer breast conditions among women living with the disease, Coutsoudis
noted.
Cracked nipples, inflammation of the breast and breast abscesses are  three conditions associated with an increased chance of HIV 
transmission through breastfeeding.
Studies suggest that approximately 11 to 13 percent of HIV-infected  women experience one or more of these conditions during breastfeeding,
the report noted.
Coutsoudis believed this could be addressed. I work in a poor  environmentin Durban, but hardly any of our mums get these infections
because they are managed well by their counsellors. More HIV-positive  women need to be taught how to breastfeed properly.
Nevertheless, treating the mother with antiretroviral drugs might  be one of the most important ways of preventing postnatal 
transmissions, according to the study. But Coutsoudis said more  research was needed to see how effective this would be in practice.
The risk of transmission is even higher if the mother becomes infected while breastfeeding. Condom use is crucial at this stage - partners 
need to know about all these risks and be encouraged to use condoms,  she warned.
Providing nutritional support to the lactating mother was also  important, as the high energy demands and sleep deprivation associated
with infant care, including breastfeeding, undermined the already  weakened immune systems of HIV-positive women.(Source:PLUSNEWS
27 October 2004).
We are not talking huge amounts here, but the mothers will need a  little bit more food ... an extra peanut butter sandwich and milk, 
suggested Coutsoudis. Report available at: http://www.linkagesproject.org/media/publications/Spotlight/Spotlight_PM
TCT_04-04.pdf
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