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Related: About this forumHow formula milk firms target mothers who can least afford it
Source: The Guardian
How formula milk firms target mothers who can least afford it
Guardian/Save the Children investigation in deprived areas of Philippines finds companies flouting international code
Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Manila
Tue 27 Feb 2018 00.01 GMT
Formula milk companies are continuing to use aggressive, clandestine and often illegal methods to target mothers in the poorest parts of the world to encourage them to choose powdered milk over breastfeeding, a new investigation shows.
A Guardian/Save the Children investigation in some of the most deprived areas of the Philippines found that Nestlé and three other companies were offering doctors, midwives and local health workers free trips to lavish conferences, meals, tickets to shows and the cinema and even gambling chips, earning their loyalty. This is a clear violation of Philippine law.
Representatives from Nestlé, Abbott, Mead Johnson and Wyeth (now owned by Nestlé) were described as a constant presence in hospitals in the Philippines, where only 34% of mothers exclusively breastfeed in the first six months. Here, they reportedly hand out infant nutrition pamphlets to mothers, which appear to be medical advice but in fact recommend specific formula brands and sometimes have money-off coupons.
Hospital staff were also found to be recommending specific formula brands in lists of essential purchases handed to new mothers. Targeted advertising on Facebook and partnerships with influential mummy bloggers means mothers are being exposed to more unregulated formula promotion than ever before.
-snip-
Guardian/Save the Children investigation in deprived areas of Philippines finds companies flouting international code
Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Manila
Tue 27 Feb 2018 00.01 GMT
Formula milk companies are continuing to use aggressive, clandestine and often illegal methods to target mothers in the poorest parts of the world to encourage them to choose powdered milk over breastfeeding, a new investigation shows.
A Guardian/Save the Children investigation in some of the most deprived areas of the Philippines found that Nestlé and three other companies were offering doctors, midwives and local health workers free trips to lavish conferences, meals, tickets to shows and the cinema and even gambling chips, earning their loyalty. This is a clear violation of Philippine law.
Representatives from Nestlé, Abbott, Mead Johnson and Wyeth (now owned by Nestlé) were described as a constant presence in hospitals in the Philippines, where only 34% of mothers exclusively breastfeed in the first six months. Here, they reportedly hand out infant nutrition pamphlets to mothers, which appear to be medical advice but in fact recommend specific formula brands and sometimes have money-off coupons.
Hospital staff were also found to be recommending specific formula brands in lists of essential purchases handed to new mothers. Targeted advertising on Facebook and partnerships with influential mummy bloggers means mothers are being exposed to more unregulated formula promotion than ever before.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2018/feb/27/formula-milk-companies-target-poor-mothers-breastfeeding
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How formula milk firms target mothers who can least afford it (Original Post)
Eugene
Feb 2018
OP
democratisphere
(17,235 posts)1. Corporate corruption and influence permeates the entire world with
fabricated twisted information and fake news. Continued corporate consolidation leads to even more corruption. The entire world is in a bad place and is going to absolute hell.
magicarpet
(14,181 posts)2. Globalism and Corporatism support....
.... Hyper-capitalism - the needs and interests of the consumer always fall by the way side.
This type of doing business is not sustainable yet we export this business model to the far parts of the world like it was the Holy Grail for peace, freedom, and prosperity for all.