
-
Grünen-Chefin Lang mahnt rasche Beilegung des Koalitionsstreits an
-
Angehörige gedenken getöteter zwölfjähriger Luise in Freudenberg
-
Polnischer Botschafter kehrt nach Israel zurück
-
Habeck lädt zum Windkraftgipfel
-
Sozialverband VdK fordert 300 Euro Einmalzahlung für Rentner
-
Boris Johnson beteuert Unschuld in der "Partygate"-Affäre
-
Stadt München lässt Konzert von Roger Waters trotz Antisemitismusvorwürfen zu
-
Ifo: Mehr Autodiebstähle und Einbrüche nach Schließung kleiner Polizeiposten
-
Macron will Inkrafttreten der Rentenreform "bis Jahresende"
-
Ermittler heben großes Waffenarsenal in Baden-Württemberg aus
-
Angespannte Ruhe in den USA vor möglicher Anklageerhebung gegen Trump
-
Wirtschaftsweise stellen Konjunkturprognose für 2023 und 2024 vor
-
Bericht: Hamburger Amoktäter hatte wohl narzisstische Persönlichkeitsstörung
-
Verdi-Chef bekräftigt Streikbereitschaft in Tarifkonflikt von öffentlichem Dienst
-
Bundesregierung ruft zu schnellem Handeln in Wasserpolitik auf
-
Britischer Premier Sunak verdiente seit 2020 rund 4,7 Millionen Pfund
-
TK-Studie: Weiter steigende Fehlzeiten aufgrund psychischer Belastungen
-
Karlsruhe verhandelt im Mai über Wiederaufnahme von Strafverfahren nach Freispruch
-
Gereizte Stimmung in der Ampel - und Versuche der Beschwichtigung
-
21-Jähriger nach tödlicher Messerattacke von Münster in Untersuchungshaft
-
Fast zehn Jahre Haft nach Erstechen von zwei Menschen in Chemnitzer Hinterhof
-
Ukraine meldet drei Tote bei russischem Drohnenangriff in Region Kiew
-
Macron will sich in TV-Interview zur umstrittenen Rentenreform äußern
-
Verletzter Haaland "frustriert und verzweifelt"
-
Sänger Herbert Grönemeyer nennt Altkanzlerin Merkel "fast autokratisch"
-
Mindestens fünf Tote laut ukrainischen Angaben bei russischen Luftangriffen
-
Wirtschaftsweise erwarten 2023 leichtes Wachstum von 0,2 Prozent
-
Schwedisches Parlament stimmt über Nato-Beitritt ab
-
Union-Boss Zingler warnt DFB: Fan-Annäherung "dauert Jahre"
-
29-Jähriger in Nordrhein-Westfalen von Baggerschaufel erschlagen
-
Whiskey oder Hundespielzeug: Supreme Court befasst sich mit Markenrechtsstreit
-
Mindestens acht Tote bei russischen Luftangriffen in der Ukraine
-
Wiederaufbau der Ukraine kostet im ersten Kriegsjahr 411 Milliarden Dollar
-
Studie: Viele Menschen in Deutschland über Klimakrise und Naturzerstörung besorgt
-
Schusswechsel bei Razzia in Reichsbürgerszene in Baden-Württemberg
-
EU-Kommission will "Greenwashing" bei Werbung verbieten
-
Deutschland exportierte 2022 rund 5,5 Kilogramm Altkleider pro Kopf
-
Sieg im Prinzenpark: Wolfsburg träumt vom Halbfinale
-
Versicherte Schäden aus Naturkatastrophen 2022 bei 125 Milliarden Dollar
-
Trotz Flick-Anruf: Talent Samardzic spielt für Serbien
-
Ex-Premier Johnson sagt vor "Partygate"-Parlamentsausschuss aus
-
Proteste gegen Rentenreform in Frankreich halten an
-
Fed trifft inmitten von Bankenkrise neue Leitzinsentscheidung
-
Lauterbach will Leiharbeit in der Altenpflege eindämmen
-
US-Notenbank hebt Leitzins erneut um 0,25 Prozentpunkte an
-
Baerbock betont vor Reise nach Nordmazedonien EU-Perspektive des Balkanlandes
-
Tötung von von Frau in Brandenburger Wehrmachtsbunker muss neu verhandelt werden
-
UNO prangert "vampirhaften" Umgang mit Wasserreserven in der Welt an
-
Tichanowskaja ruft Belarus zum Abbruch der Beziehungen zu Russland auf
-
Drei mutmaßliche Steinewerfer in Sachsen wegen versuchten Mordes festgenommen

UN slams 'aggressive' formula milk marketing
The United Nations slammed baby formula makers Wednesday for "unethical" marketing strategies, accusing them of aggressively targeting expecting parents and health workers and putting shareholder interests before children's health.
It is widely recognised that breastfeeding carries huge health benefits.
But countries' failure to crack down on the marketing of breast milk substitutes means far too many children are still being reared on formula, the World Health Organization and the UN children's agency Unicef warned, in a new report.
It found that the $55-billion formula milk industry systematically deploys aggressive marketing strategies, spending up to $5 billion a year to sway parents' decisions on how to feed their infants.
"This report shows very clearly that formula milk marketing remains unacceptably pervasive, misleading and aggressive," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement.
Unicef chief Catherine Russell called for "robust policies, legislation and investments in breastfeeding to ensure that women are protected from unethical marketing practices".
Experts have long extolled the health benefits of breastfeeding, saying that breast-fed children are healthier, perform better on intelligence tests and are less likely to be overweight or suffer from diabetes later in life.
Women who breastfeed also have a reduced risk of breast and ovarian cancer, research shows.
- 'Marketing is everywhere' -
But despite the known benefits, only 44 percent of babies under the age of six months are exclusively breastfed, as recommended by the WHO and Unicef.
And while global breastfeeding rates have increased little in the past two decades, the sale of formula milk has more than doubled over the same period, Wednesday's report said.
Lead report author Nigel Rollins, of the WHO's maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health division, blamed the industry's aggressive marketing practices.
"We see marketing everywhere," he told AFP, pointing to targeted digital messaging, promotional gifts to new parents, and even efforts to turn health professionals into a "conduit for messages about formula".
The report, which surveyed 8,500 parents and pregnant women and 300 health workers across eight countries in various regions of the world, found that more than half of parents and pregnant women said they had been targeted with formula marketing.
In Britain, 84 percent of all women surveyed said they had been exposed to such marketing, while a full 97 percent in China had, "increasing their likelihood of choosing formula feeding," the UN agencies said.
- Pseudoscience -
Rollins pointed to how companies use pseudoscience to suggest that breast milk is not enough on its own or that formula does a better job of helping babies to sleep through the night.
"Children or babies crying, not sleeping, are very worrisome to parents, and the industry uses those moments to say our product is the solution for your problem," he said.
Wednesday's report voiced particular concern about marketing targeting of health care professionals with free samples, promotional gifts, research grants, and paid conferences.
Over a third of the women surveyed said a health worker had recommended a specific brand of formula to them, it found.
Rollins stressed the goal was not to clear store shelves of formula, acknowledging that breast feeding is not an option for all parents.
But he insisted far more needed to be done to ensure adherence to an international code of conduct adopted by the World Health Assembly back in 1981, demanding that formula not be marketed or distributed in a way that interferes with the promotion of breastfeeding.
Wednesday's report did not name specific companies, painting the problem as an industry-wide issue.
Nestle, the world's biggest formula maker, meanwhile insisted to AFP that it was "highly compliant with the WHO Code".
The Switzerland-based company pointed out that it was "voluntarily stopping promoting formula for infants 0-6 months across the world by year end", including in the United States, Canada and Japan, countries that have no regulation on the issue.
Nestle said it supported "the adoption of laws on marketing of infant formula in all countries", adding that it was "ready to work with WHO, Unicef and others to make this happen".
M.Ouellet--BTB