PHA-Exchange> South Africa's draft Code on formula advertising

Claudio aviva at netnam.vn
Tue Feb 10 00:39:09 PST 2004


From: Jacquie Nutt 
"Interested persons are invited to submit any substantiated comments or representations on the proposed regulations to the Director-General of Health, Private Bag X828, Pretoria, 0001 (for the attention of the Director: Nutrition)"

emails of support are not required, and paper letters are requested.  I don't know if they would accept printed emails that I receive and post on?

The South African draft regulations may be downloaded from www.doh.gov.za

Note: This is at the very least very worrisome!!

Claudio

      DA milks baby adverts

      Dec 09 2003 04:12:09:607PM 

      The DA has slammed a proposal to restrict ads for baby formula, bottles and teats, and says it infringes on freedom of speech. 

      Cape Town - The health department's proposals to restrict advertisements for baby formula, bottles and teats are a serious infringement on freedom of speech, the Democratic Alliance said on Tuesday. 

      While the DA recognised the need to promote breast-milk as the best nutrition for infants, the department's draft Regulations Relating to Foodstuffs for Infants and Young Children lacked balance and common sense, the party's HIV and Aids spokesperson Mike Waters said in a statement. 

      "In addition to banning advertisements for infant formula and feeding gadgets, commentary about these products in the media and all industry help lines - a serious infringement on freedom of speech - the government is actually asking the manufacturers of these products to discourage their use," he said. 

      Besides other reasons mothers might have for not breast-feeding, the best scientific advice recommended that HIV-positive mothers should not breast-feed because, even if their baby was born HIV-negative, they could be infected through breast-feeding. 

      "This alone provides a sizeable market for infant formula and related products. Manufacturers should be allowed to market their products to these potential customers. The Department of Health should not encroach on the free market. 

      "Instead of acting like Big Brother, the government should rather ensure that mothers have the necessary information to make an informed choice, both through its own media campaign and through pre- and post-natal counselling at public health facilities." 

      It was not necessary to place such draconian demands and restrictions on the industry to achieve the objective of healthier infants and young children in South Africa, Waters said. 


     



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