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Leading National Trend, Many of Maryland’s Hospitals Have Ended Infant Formula Marketing

Oct. 29, 2013

Leading National Trend, Many of Maryland’s Hospitals Have Ended Infant Formula Marketing

Vast Majority of Top-Ranked U.S. Hospitals, including Johns Hopkins, Have Ended the Practice, New Study Shows

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The vast majority of the U.S. News and World Report’s 2013-14 “Best Hospitals” – including Johns Hopkins Hospital – have ended or substantially limited formula marketing to new mothers, according to a new study released today by Public Citizen and the Ban the Bags campaign.

A large majority of the best hospitals have stopped distributing formula company-sponsored discharge bags with formula samples, the most common form of formula marketing.

The study, based on a Public Citizen survey and reports collected by Ban the Bags, shows an encouraging trend among hospitals seeking to improve mother and baby health through infant feeding support policies. It also represents progress in efforts to block companies from co-opting hospitals and using them to peddle products to new mothers with what appears to be a stamp of approval from the medical establishment.

“We are thrilled that 15 hospitals in Maryland, including the top-ranked hospitals, have already banned the distribution of formula bags. This shows great initiative to adopt best practices and end infant formula marketing,” said Dr. Dana Silver, of the Maryland Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and Secretary of the Maryland Breastfeeding Coalition.

“This report shows that prohibiting infant formula marketing is not only a recommended policy, but a best practice employed by the top hospitals,” said Public Citizen’s Executive Vice President Margrete Strand Rangnes, a mother of two. “The most reputable hospitals are realizing that marketing formula is unethical and ultimately undermines the health of mothers and babies. Now it’s time for the laggards to catch up, to protect infant health.”

There is overwhelming agreement by major healthcare provider organizations that distributing discharge bags sends the wrong message to mothers that hospitals endorse formula feeding, as compared to breastfeeding. Healthcare professionals agree that exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months after a child is born has numerous short- and long-term health benefits for both babies and mothers.

Additionally, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and others have estimated that women save up to $1,500 per year in formula costs if they exclusively breastfeed.

Research convincingly shows that mothers who receive infant formula samples are less likely to breastfeed exclusively and are more likely to breastfeed for shorter durations. Accordingly, the U.S. Surgeon General’s 2011 Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding called for more enforcement of the World Health Organization (WHO) International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes that prohibits in-hospital formula marketing. Hospitals are increasingly seeking to become Baby Friendly, a designation that requires them to cease marketing formula to new mothers.

Public Citizen and the Ban the Bags Campaign made the following key findings on the nation’s top-ranked hospitals in gynecology:

  • Sixty-seven percent of top hospitals in gynecology (30 out of 45) reported not distributing formula company sponsored discharge bags, formula samples or other formula company promotional materials to mothers in their maternity units. Another 11 percent (5 of 45) reported limiting formula company-sponsored discharge bag and sample distribution to mothers who request them, or based on other criteria.
  • Eighty-two percent (14 of 17) of U.S. News’ Honor Roll of overall best hospitals reported having a policy or practice against distributing formula company-sponsored discharge bags or other promotional materials.
  • Eleven percent of hospitals in gynecology (5 of 45) still distribute formula company-sponsored materials, and a handful of hospitals did not respond to the survey.

“It is such wonderful news that so many of the top-ranked hospitals have eliminated the distribution of commercial infant formula discharge bags,” said Marsha Walker, RN, IBCLC, co-chair of the Ban the Bags campaign. “This demonstrates such a significant commitment to the health of their littlest patients. Our experience at the Ban the Bags campaign in Massachusetts has shown that formula marketing does not belong in the hospital, and hospitals should market health and nothing else.”

The report reaffirms other data showing that hospitals have been steadily trending toward ending formula promotion over the past decade. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Maternity Practices in Infant Nutrition and Care (mPINC) survey, 27.4 percent of hospitals had discontinued the formula discharge bags in 2007 and by 2011, 45.5 percent had ended the practice. All hospitals in Massachusetts and Rhode Island have voluntarily banned discharge bags.

The study is part of a nationwide Public Citizen campaign aimed at both healthcare facilities and major formula makers, and the Ban the Bags campaign that grew out of the Massachusetts Breastfeeding Coalition’s successful “Ban the Bags” initiative. More than 16,500 people have signed Public Citizen’s petition calling on the three major formula companies – Abbott, Mead Johnson and Nestle—to stop marketing formula in healthcare facilities. To read Public Citizen’s report and learn more about the organization’s campaign to stop infant formula marketing in healthcare facilities, visit https://www.citizen.org/our-work/health-and-safety/infant-formula-marketing.

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