Surge in breastfeeding

A third of South African children under six months old are now exclusively breastfed, which is nearly a five-fold increase over the last 20 years.

The South African Breastmilk Reserve (SABR), a not-for-profit, human milk banking organisation, says this is a significant achievement and this massive shift is largely thanks to the combined efforts of breastfeeding advocates, healthcare providers and government.

“The dramatic increase in breastfeeding rates would not have been possible without the sustained partnership between the Department of Health (DOH), healthcare providers and organisations like the SABR,” deputy director of Nutrition at the Limpopo Department of Health (LDOH) Daddy Matthews said.

Last year, the LDOH expanded its human milk banking activities, aiming to protect, promote and support breastfeeding, by establishing the first state-of-the-art human milk banking facility in Limpopo at Mankweng Provincial Hospital.

This is the first of four new public sector human milk banks proposed for rollout in Limpopo.

In 1998, the South African Demographic and Health Survey (SADHS) found that just 7% of infants under the age of six months were exclusively breastfed.

The latest edition of the survey found that that proportion had increased to 32% by last year.

“The survey is welcome evidence that society can and will change its attitude to breastfeeding, given the right interventions,” Stasha Jordan, breastfeeding activist and executive director of the SABR, sponsored by founding partner Netcare and Discovery, said. Breastmilk banks Since its inception in 2003, the SABR has set up, operated and handed over 51 human milk banks, serving more than 100 hospitals throughout South Africa.

These banks provide much-needed breastmilk to both premature babies of mothers who have difficulty initiating lactation, and orphaned babies.

The human milk banking initiative is one of the numerous efforts that, coupled with the implementation of the ‘Mother and Baby Friendly Health Initiative’ of the NDOH, have contributed to the quintupling of breastfeeding rates for infants under six months old.

“We are lucky to have great partners in the Provincial and National Departments of Health, Discovery, and Netcare.

Together we have helped save the lives of thousands of premature and very-low-birth-weight infants in Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICU) around the country and promoted exclusive breastfeeding for all children,” Jordan explained.

Matthews said: “As positive as the results of the SADHS are, we still have a long way to go. In order to meet the Sustainable Development Goals set for 2025, exclusive breastfeeding rates of infants up to six months old need to increase to 50%.

“The growing availability of human milk banks means that babies without access to their mothers’ milk can still be fed on breastmilk,” he continued. World Breastfeeding Week Jordan urged: “As we celebrate World Breastfeeding Week in the first week of August, we should see these results as a call to redouble our efforts.

“There is no question that breastfeeding gives babies their best possible start to life.

“We must educate and support mothers, enabling them to breastfeed and thereby grow food security for children in Africa and decrease infant mortality and morbidity rates,” she said.

Matthews said that in order to continue this positive trend, “we need more active and widespread support from business and civil society”.

“For example, breastfeeding in public is still seen as taboo, and many breastfeeding mothers are not adequately supported at their workplaces.

“All sectors of our society must work together if we are to reach our goal,” he concluded.

To get involved and alleviate the challenges faced by the South African Breastmilk Reserve, including low breastfeeding rates in South Africa, sourcing donor mothers and funding for the operation of the milk banks, visit or call (011) 482 1920 or e-mail:

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