Friday 12 April 2013

Baby milk shortages - formula manufacturers, the politics of infant feeding, breastfeeding

The news that Danone, which makes Aptamil and Cow & Gate formula milks, has imposed sales restrictions on parents in the UK has been all over the media this week. Shoppers are now limited to purchasing two packs of powdered infant formula per day. Supposedly this is to prevent bulk buying and informal export of formula to China - at least, that is the explanation that Danone have given on the brands' respective websites, in a letter from managing director John Sykes.

However, there can be no denying that the story has generated massive publicity for the brands involved. For example, in this segment on the BBC website the mother is filmed using Aptamil formula, and this article from the Daily Mail carries a prominent shot of both Danone brands on supermarket shelves, complete with shelf-edge explanation of the buying restrictions.

What better way to add cachet to the Danone brand than to let its UK market know how highly prized its products are in China? The fact that millions of Chinese consumers (in a country beset by formula milk scandals, where formula advertising is aggressive and unregulated, and breastfeeding rates are on the way down) trust the brand and will pay inflated sums for it is surely something worth (from Danone's perspective) instilling in the minds of UK consumers. In addition, products in short supply have 'rarity value' - it's like must-have toys at Christmas, or petrol, or limited-edition designer handbags - that 'value', in the minds of consumers, is great news for retailers and manufacturers. Crucially, 'news' stories are not seen as 'advertising', although in practice, as anyone involved in the media knows, they fulfil the same function - there is truth in the old maxim 'all publicity is good publicity'.

The knock-on effects of all this on our culture of infant feeding on the UK are more subtle. A slew of articles about formula feeding normalises it further - a shortage that affects millions of parents across the UK gives the message that 'everyone' is using formula as opposed to breastfeeding. Images of specific brands accompanying the articles make it more likely that parents, faced with a shelf full of products and with little access to accurate, unbiased information about infant formula, will reach for the product they recognise. As shown by the Daily Mail article mentioned above, a focus in the media on formula feeding can bring with it a wave of anti-breastfeeding feeling. The author of the article claims that "the breastapo are out in force, berating the formula feeding pariahs who feed our babies this manufactured 'poison'." I don't believe this or see any evidence of it; all this article shows is that, given a convenient peg to hang it on (news of a formula shortage), the same tired elements of a FF v BF argument that helps no one and only serves to divide women and line the pockets of the formula manufacturers, can be trotted out yet again.

(A separate, but I suspect related, article in the Mirror about vitamin D deficiency mentioned Cow & Gate Growing Up Milk by name, causing me to wonder whether the article had been 'inspired' by a Danone press release... the formula companies are very keen for parents to know that children consuming more than 450ml of first stage or follow-on formula per day do not need vitamin D supplements.)

Consider the context of all this. We already know from the Infant Feeding Survey 2010 that in the UK many parents are unaware of the differences between infant (first stage) formula and follow-on formula (suitable from six months) - the latter being an unnecessary product specifically designed to circumvent the restrictions on marketing infant formula imposed by the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes, which is not even fully implemented in the UK. We also know that the formula companies will battle incessantly for market share with a huge array of marketing tactics (carelines, baby clubs, marketing to health professionals, roadshows... the list goes on). All this is funded by marketing budgets, paid for by formula consumers. Increased market share means increased profits. In this sort of climate a shortage of product makes perfect sense as an aggressive marketing ploy.

In case you think I'm overstating the case here, I'd like to highlight the work of Baby Milk Action, which has recently published a new report Look What They're Doing in the UK!. In the press release that accompanies the report Mike Brady, Campaigns and Networking Coordinator, says:

"Given the massive production capacity that Danone has in nearby Ireland there is something about this story that does not ring true: it is surely more likely Danone that is prioritising other markets than people exporting supermarket stocks. Danone is locked in fierce competition with Nestlé, particularly in Asia. Danone is gaining massive publicity for its products on the back of this shortage scare, but parents who use formula can heed Department of Health advice and switch to other brands. Claims made that one particular brand is better than another do not stand up to scrutiny. As our Look What They're Doing in the UK report demonstrates, companies are endlessly imaginative in how they push their products."

In the BBC report on the issue, Nestle, the second largest formula manufacturer in the UK market, said that it had not seen an increase in demand due to unofficial exports, and that there was no shortage of its products. (Nevertheless, some supermarkets are limiting sales of Nestle brands too.)

It seems to me that what's needed, as usual in reference to infant feeding, is wider access to clear, unbiased information that doesn't come from the formula manufacturers themselves, and this article in the Telegraph made the same point. UNICEFs Babyfriendly initiative publishes A guide to infant formula for parents who are bottle-feeding, which is a great place to start. Another good source (aimed at health professionals, but anyone can download the report) is Infant Milks in the UK.

It's also not unreasonable, as part of the ongoing discussion, to talk about breastfeeding. It's not shaming of those who use formula to point out that, on a population level, increased breastfeeding would mean both improved public health and less reliance on commercially-driven formula milk manufacturers. The 'shortage' story could be seen as demonstrating perfectly some of the most amazing qualities of breastfeeding: most mothers can produce hundreds of litres of breastmilk (incomparable to formula) for a zero carbon footprint - no food miles, no energy costs of manufacture or reconstitution, no supply-chain issues. 

I've been considering the implications of all this for breastfeeding support. I had a conversation with a formula-feeding mother while I was planning this article: she asked me what, as a breastfeeding peer supporter, I would do if someone asked me about formula feeding. I thought hard about what I could do in this situation, aside from talking to the mother about her reasons for switching to see if there was anything I could help her with before she stopped breastfeeding, and discussing the option of mixed feeding (on the grounds that any breastfeeding is better than none). I realised there's a lot of information I can give, although I would be upfront about my lack of personal experience of bottle or formula feeding. I do, however, know about the most recent guidelines for making up bottles and the reasons for them, and am happy to talk to mothers about them. I have also read the guides above and feel that I could tell a mother that since the composition of formula in the UK is regulated, and claims about differences between brands don't hold water, her decision can be based on price and what her child seems to prefer, and she needn't be restricted to one brand. I'd hope, in doing this, to leave the mother feeling better-informed about her options, and not let-down by a sudden lack of support when her circumstances change. I'd love to hear what other breastfeeding supporters think about this.