Health
Nafdac And Breast Milk For Babies
Indisputably, appropriate childhood growth and development is often to a very large extent facilitated by adequate and ideal nutrition as inadequate knowledge of what constitutes genuine nutrition on the part of parents could result into malnutrition and other diseases for infants.
This perharps explains the rationale behind the commitment of Nigeria’s advocate of ideal health for all, the National Agency for Food, Drug and Administration Control (NAFDAC) towards a befitting feeding partern for Nigerian babies by confronting infants developmental challenges through relentless emphasis on the imperativeness of an adequately sustained and standardized nutrition for Nigerian infants.
Armed with the belief that only healthy, quality and ideal nutrition for infants at birth could guarantee appreciable and dynamic developmental growth for them, it has consequently implored all nursing and intending mothers nationwide to urgently, embrace the internationally acceptable “six months mandatory exclusive and intensive breastfeeding for the newborn, with subsequent complimentary nutrition from both local foods and natural milk substitutes with continuous breast milk application for a period of two years or more.
Remarkably, the current mode of infants nutrition being canvassed by the Dr Paul Orhii led NAFDAC management team, is absolutely in line with globally recommended health practices as supported by numerous international health organisations among which are the World Health Organisation (WHO),United Nation Children Fund (UNICEF) as well as the World Alliance for Breast Feeding Action(WABA)which coordinates the annual World breastfeeding week, to mention just a few.
Undoubtedly, in spite of the various internationally acclaimed sophistications that seems to have characterised human mode of existence over the years, human female breast milk have remained the most unique, nutritious, dependable and highly inegligible commodity certified globally as suitable for feeding newly born babies in view of its very rich nutritional contents such as adequate protein, fats, carbohydrate, salt, minerals, vitamins, water, sugar, anti-bodies, ideal temperature, bacterial free status etc.
Unfortunately, the comprehensive adoption of this internationally adjudged highly nutritious and pro-infant development ingredients laden substance for infant nutrition by Nigerian nursing mothers appears to have suffered severe setback in recent times due to the emergence of numerous varieties of breast milk substitutes which ardorns the nation’s markets.
While some mothers hinge their preference for these artificial alternative nutrition on the need to adequately and urgently meet work demand at offices as co-bread winners for their families in line with modern economic demand, some consider it as a strain free and stress free alternative while simultaneously helping them to maintain and retain very enviable and attractive shapes for the admiration of both the general public, their spouses or husbands.
From whichever perspective these arguments are being critically examined, natural human female breast milk remains the most highly nutritious and therefore more advantageous than its numerous man made substitutes which abounds in all nooks and crannies of Nigeria.
Conscious of the numerous negative implications of current maternal practices whereby breast milk substitutes appears to have taken over the place of natural milk as ideal nutrition for babies, various countries of the World have painstakingly evolved various strategies and techniques meant to encourage nursing and expectant mothers to resort to the use of natural milk as a most ideal means of nutrient for their babies.
Interestingly, Nigeria, an internationally revered and acclaimed Giant of Africa, is however not left out in the current global health boosting practices as her unique and vibrant healthy Nigeria guaranteeing machinery tagged, the National Agency For Food, Drug and Administration sControl, acronym NAFDAC, has since swung into full action in this regard impressing on mothers nationwide, the need to ensure that their infants are fed exclusively, intensively and adequately with natural breast milk minimally for six months from date of birth before ideal breast milk substitutes and locally available foods could be adopted as complimentary nutrients while still continuing with breast feeding for over two years.
Being an agency of the Nigerian Government saddled with the scientific cum medical responsibility to guarantee a healthy population in accordance with its enabling Act tagged:decree number 15 of 1993,amended by decree 19 of 1999 and now known as Act Cap N1,Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN) 2004 and mandated to regulate as well as control the manufacture, importation, exportation, distribution, advertisement, sale and use of Foods, Drugs, Cosmetics, Medical Devices, Packaged Water, Chemicals and Detergents collectively regarded by the agency as “regulated products, ’NAFDAC has left no one in doubt particularly since the advent of the agency’s current management team as to its total determination to ensure and achieve a sustainable, durable, dependable health for both old and young Nigerians including infants.
This laurel winning agency, is absolutely mindful of the fact that Nigerian infants which will in turn metamorphose into ‘the youth ’often regarded as the nation’s leaders of tomorrow, absolutely deserves the best of both care and nutrition to be medically fit so as to ideally confront the perceived socio-economic and political challenges of the future.
It is also aware that the economic, political and social success of any nation ,is largely dependent on the availability of adequate and highly dependable human resource potentials and thus its current insistence on a very good, amiable, reliable and virile developmental background for the nation’s infants who incidentally are our tomorrow’s adults thereby alluding to the popular saying that ‘it is an egg that becomes a Hen’.
Expectedly, NAFDAC has severally, made series of very frantic and highly positive result oriented efforts aimed at enlightening and educating Nigerian mothers in this regard.
Among such infants life saving efforts include, placement of pro-exclusive natural breast milk/breast feeding messages on radio, television, daily newspapers, weekly tabloid and magazines, erection and display of bill boards at strategic locations nationwide, printing and free distribution of public enlightenment booklets (eg NAFDAC campaigns-which comprises varieties of educative messages in this regard) etc.
Interestingly, the benefits derivable from ideally complying with this regulatory agency’s directives on infants feeding pattern and techniques are indeed numerous and as such only few of such advantages are highlighted bellow.
Apart from fostering a very strong mother –baby relationship via the promotion of a psychological bond between babies and their mothers, utilising human female breast milk for feeding infants out rightly reduces the risk of mothers developing breast cancer, cervical or ovarian cancers.
It helps to prevent obesity, complications at child birth, maternal mortality as well as check social ills.
Breast feeding accords babies the opportunity and ability to grow faster, stronger, healthier, happier, garner the needed weight, reduces risk of infections, allergy potentials, convenience, enables mothers to speedily return to pre-pregnancy weight as well as encourages child spacing.
Conclusively therefore, the promotion, protection as well as outright support for exclusive, intensive and durable breast feeding as a more ideal nutrition for new born babies should be compulsorily embraced by all and sundry in the interest of our infants, nation and posterity more so that breast milk has been proven by experts as incontestably advantageous particularly due to its vantage status as the milk that nature has already provided for babies and has the ability to adjust itself during feeding so that infants first gets ‘foremilk’ which they gulp easily to quench their thirst and desire to suck the eventual richer ’hind milk’ which satisfies babies appetite. We must all heed the music of reasoning as being played by NAFDAC since to be forewarned they say is to be forearmed.
Ikhilae resides in Port Harcourt.
Martins Ikhilae
Health
‘How Micro RNA Research Won Nobel Prize’
Two United States scientists who unraveled the human micro RNA have won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2024.
Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun won the coveted prize for their work on microRNA as their discoveries help explain how complex life emerged on earth and how the human body is made up of a wide variety of different tissues.
MicroRNAs influence how genes – the instructions for life – are controlled inside organisms, including humans.
Every cell in the human body contains the same raw genetic information, locked in our DNA.
However, despite starting with the identical genetic information, the cells of the human body are wildly different in form and function.
The electrical impulses of nerve cells are distinct from the rhythmic beating of heart cells. The metabolic powerhouse that is a liver cell is distinct to a kidney cell, which filters urea out of the blood.
The light-sensing abilities of cells in the retina are different in skillset to white blood cells that produce antibodies to fight infection.
So much variety can arise from the same starting material because of gene expression.
The US scientists were the first to discover microRNAs and how they exerted control on how genes are expressed differently in different tissues.
The medicine and physiology prize winners are selected by the Nobel Assembly of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute.
They said: “Their groundbreaking discovery revealed a completely new principle of gene regulation that turned out to be essential for multicellular organisms, including humans.
“It is now known that the human genome codes for over 1,000 microRNAs.”
Health
WHO Begins Regulation On Antibiotic Waste
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has begun acting to curb effects of antibiotic pollution.
The new guidance on wastewater and solid waste management for antibiotic manufacturing sheds light on this important but neglected challenge ahead of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) High-Level Meeting on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) taking place on 26 September 2024.
The emergence and spread of AMR caused by antibiotic pollution could undermine the effectiveness of antibiotics globally, including the medicines produced at the manufacturing sites responsible for the pollution.
Despite high antibiotic pollution levels being widely documented, the issue is largely unregulated and quality assurance criteria typically do not address environmental emissions. In addition, once distributed, there is a lack of information provided to consumers on how to dispose of antibiotics when they are not used, for example, when they expire or when a course is finished but there is still antibiotic left over.
“Pharmaceutical waste from antibiotic manufacturing can facilitate the emergence of new drug-resistant bacteria, which can spread globally and threaten our health. Controlling pollution from antibiotic production contributes to keeping these life-saving medicines effective for everyone,” said Dr Yukiko Nakatani, WHO Assistant Director-General for AMR ad interim.
Globally, there is a lack of accessible information on the environmental damage caused by manufacturing of medicines.
“The guidance provides an independent and impartial scientific basis for regulators, procurers, inspectors, and industry themselves to include robust antibiotic pollution control in their standards,” said Dr Maria Neira, Director, Department of Environment, Climate Change and Health, WHO. “Critically, the strong focus on transparency will equip buyers, investors and the general public to make decisions that account for manufacturers’ efforts to control antibiotic pollution.”
Health
Kebbi Harmonises Doctors’ Salaries To Curb Brain Drain
In a concerted effort to curb brain drain, the Kebbi State Government has harmonised medical doctors’ salaries to be at par with their colleagues in the federal government’s tertiary health facilities.
Kebbi State Commissioner for Health, Musa Inusa-Isma’il, disclosed this at the handing over of ambulances to the state-owned health facilities at the Ministry of Health in Birnin Kebbi yesterday.
Inusa Isma’il, according to a statement by Ahmed Idris, the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, said the essence of the harmonisation was to retain the existing medical doctors and attract more to the services of the state.
According to him, the doctors across the state had already started enjoying the new salaries from August 2024.
He said the release of the vehicles was in fulfilment of Governor Nasir Idris’ promise to uplift health care services in the state.
“His Excellency said I should inform you, the beneficiaries of this gesture, that the vehicle should be strictly used for the intended purpose. It should not be used for anything else.
“If there is no referral case, each of the vehicles must be parked at the hospital by 6 pm. The governor said you should warn your drivers against reckless driving as well as violating the instructions.
“We should also do everything possible to reciprocate the gesture by working according to the terms and conditions attached,” he advised.
The benefiting health facilities included Sir Yahaya Memorial Hospital, Birnin Kebbi; State Teaching Hospital, Kalgo; General Hospital, Argungu; General Hospital, Yauri; General Hospital, Zuru; and General Hospital, Bunza.
In his speech, the permanent secretary of the ministry, Dr Shehu Koko, recalled that the ambulances were handed over to the ministry last Friday by the governor for the onward handover to the benefiting hospitals.
He observed that the ambulances would go a long way in improving the referral system in the state, adding that delays in reaching the secondary and tertiary facilities would be eliminated.
The permanent secretary attributed the high rate of maternal mortality in the country to delays in getting to the health facilities for proper medical care.
“We believe with the provision of these ambulances, part of the gaps we have in our referral system will be addressed, whereby patients who require secondary healthcare could be easily transported to secondary and tertiary health centres, where they can get such help,” he said.
In a goodwill message, Commissioner for Information and Culture Alhaji Yakubu Ahmed expressed gratitude to the governor for the support he has given to the ministry to excel.
While advising the beneficiaries to use the vehicles judiciously, the commissioner advised that services and maintenance of the vehicles must be prompt to derive the maximum benefits from the vehicles.
The commissioner also highlighted some achievements recorded by the government in the last year, including beautification of the state capital, completion of a multimillion-naira ultramodern state secretariat, road construction, construction and renovation of classrooms and upgrading of some health facilities, among others.
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