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Milk powder
maketing slammed
By Flora Wang
STAFF REPORTER
Sunday, Jul 30, 2006,Page 2
Several civic groups yesterday
urged the Department of Health (DOH) to tighten restrictions on the
promotion of infant formula milk powder and food.
The Taiwan Academy of
Breastfeeding, along with seven other associations, made the call at
a joint press conference yesterday, saying the government should
establish a committee to govern infants health issues, particularly
to regulate the marketing of babies' formula milk powder and food in
medical institutions.
Academy chairwoman Chen Chao-huei
(陳昭惠) said that many formula milk manufacturers cooperate with
medical professionals and promote their products in hospitals,
clinics and pharmacies, which is a violation of international
protocols.
Chairwoman for the Chinese Dietetic
Society Chang Yueh-chi (章樂綺) said the UN's
International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes was
introduced to Taiwan by the Consumers' Foundation in 1983.
The code seeks to ensure newborns'
health by strictly regulating how companies can sell infant formula
milk and food.
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"Offering free
or sponsored baby milk powder is not a goodwill gesture. It is
an effective marketing strategy that should not be encouraged
because it seriously impedes breastfeeding." |
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Chang Yueh-chi, chairwoman for the Chinese Dietetic Society |
However, according to
research conducted by the National Taipei College of Nursing's
Graduate Institute of Midwifery two years ago, close to 35
percent of mothers were given free product samples or advertisements
by salesmen or medical staff in medical institutions.
Around 11 percent of the
interviewees even reported that they had received follow-up phone
calls from manufacturers after giving birth, Chen said.
In addition, in 2001 Taiwan
failed an evaluation conducted by the International Baby Food Action
Network, an NGO that monitors compliance with the code, 20 years
after the code was officially issued, Chang said.
She added that the country did not
pass the review because product marketing still prevailed in medical
institutions.
"Offering free or sponsored baby
milk powder is not a goodwill gesture. It is an effective marketing
strategy that should not be encouraged because it seriously impedes
breastfeeding," Chang said.
Calling babies "the youngest and
the weakest consumers," she said governmental regulations still need
to catch up with international norms.
Bureau of Food Safety director
Hsiao Tung-ming (蕭東銘) admitted that the
department's regulations and punishments for illegal baby formula
milk and food marketing remain inadequate.
He said the bureau will promote an
amendment to the Act Governing Food Sanitation (食品衛生管理法) in the
Legislative Yuan's next session to better regulate the products.
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