Sep 2018 1st Edition

Limpopo Health takes breastfeeding to new heights

Written by Kanego Lewele and More Matshediso

The Centenary of Mama Albertina Sisulu sees the Limpopo Department of health naming a breastfeeding room after her.

Limpopo Health MEC Dr Phophi Ramathuba (seated) flanked by breastfeeding mothers who came to the launch.Breastfeeding is optimal for child health development and nutrition of infants but most working mothers find it difficult to continue the practice when they return from maternity leave.

This is because there are no suitable spaces at most workplaces for new mothers to express or breastfeed their children during working hours, and they become discouraged to continue breastfeeding because they spend most of the day at work without their babies.

In an effort to address this challenge, the Limpopo Department of Health has launched the first ever breastfeeding and expressing room within its offices.

The breastfeeding room was launched by MEC Dr Phophi Ramathuba.

It is named after Mama Albertina Sisulu whose centenary is also celebrated this year.

It is hoped that the room will not only support working breastfeeding mothers, but also encourage other departments to support breastfeeding women in the workplace.

Employees at the department can also have baby-minders bring their babies to work during lunch time for breastfeeding. The room can also be used by mothers who want to express during working hours.

One of the department’s employees Mpho Kutumela and mother of 11-months-old twins, a boy and girl, is excited about the facility.

“The breastfeeding room will come in handy for us as mothers because it will also afford us the opportunity to express our breast milk freely in a conducive environment,” she said.

Mothers who visit the department with their babies for any reason will also be allowed to use the room to breastfeed their children.  

MEC Ramathuba said the Albertina Sisulu Breastfeeding room is one of a kind in the province.

The MEC hopes that this initiative will contribute towards the promotion and protection of exclusive breastfeeding practices with the aim of achieving optimal child health development.

“Breast milk contains all nutrients needed by infants and cannot be reproduced artificially,” said the MEC.  

Benefits of breastfeeding

  • Breast milk contains antibodies that help your baby fight off viruses and bacteria.
  • Breastfeeding lowers your baby's risk of having allergies.
  • Babies who are breastfed exclusively for the first six months have lower risks of infections, respiratory illnesses, and stints of diarrhoea.
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