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Credit: LEOL30 on Flickr, under Creative Commons
(WOMENSENEWS)-In Detroit, the Black Mothers' Breastfeeding Association is talking and writing and generating videos about the roadblocks to breastfeeding in communities of color.
Organizers and advocates are also talking about ways to overcome historical, societal and social barriers to breastfeeding success. To spread and promote its message it has produced a micro documentary, “Knocking Down Barriers: Reclaiming a Breastfeeding Tradition.”
Breastfeeding supporters are also turning to Twitter to help spark a conversation about the film and the domination of infant formula marketing.
Baby formula deemed so valuable, it's on lock & key in #Detroit stores. Let's show value in #BLKBFING https://t.co/cQeAn3pDHI @maraschecht
— Black Mothers BF (@BMBFA) April 24, 2014
An inside look at how moms still have to fight to pump on the job! #BLKBFING @USbreastfeeding @momjustice @HygeiaBaby https://t.co/cQeAn3pDHI
— Black Mothers BF (@BMBFA) April 24, 2014
An inside look at how moms still have to fight to pump on the job! #BLKBFING @USbreastfeeding @momjustice @HygeiaBaby https://t.co/cQeAn3pDHI
— Black Mothers BF (@BMBFA) April 24, 2014
Every black woman should watch this doc! Going back to our roots #BLKBFING #sheDIDTHAT https://t.co/cQeAn3pDHI @HTC3_Teens @WINNDetroit
— Black Mothers BF (@BMBFA) April 24, 2014
Does your company provide space for #breastfeeding? Watch what working moms go through #BLKBFING @BWWings @McDonalds https://t.co/cQeAn3pDHI
— Black Mothers BF (@BMBFA) April 24, 2014
Beautiful documentary about #Detroit‘s black #women #breastfeeding https://t.co/cQeAn3pDHI @BestforBabes @urbanmatriarch
— Black Mothers BF (@BMBFA) April 24, 2014
Nationwide Efforts
These activists join several efforts over the past few years to raise the volume on the barriers to breastfeeding in the black community across the country.
The Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in 2013 that black mothers nationwide lag behind other racial and ethnic groups when it comes to breastfeeding. In a recent CDC study, 54 percent of black mothers initiated breastfeeding compared with 74 percent of white mothers and 80 percent of Hispanic mothers. The CDC said this gap persists regardless of income and educational attainment.
In June 2012, the Black Mothers' Breastfeeding Association was given a $100,000 grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation to close the racial gap in breastfeeding rates.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office on Women's Health launched the campaign “It's Only Natural” in April 2013 to educate black families about the importance of breastfeeding.
In March, Praeclarus Press published the book “Free to Breastfeed: Voices of Black Women” by Jeanine Valrie Logan, a blogger and program director of Chicago Volunteer Doulas, Inc, and Anayah Sangodele-Ayoka, co-founder of Black Breastfeeding Week and the Free to Breastfeed support website. In it, the authors relate the breastfeeding experiences of black mothers that have been largely ignored by mainstream media.
Watch the Black Mothers' Breastfeeding Association video: