| International Code Of Marketing Of Breast-milk Substitutes |
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PROVISIONS OF THE CODE The Code forbids virtually all forms of advertisements and marketing methods for breast milk substitutes, especially against advertisements claiming health benefits from the substitutes. The Code also outlines the ways in which companies can communicate with mothers and health workers about their baby milk products.
The information required by the Code to be printed on labels must be printed in simple and easy to understand terms in the language of the area where the product is sold. Certain wordings, such as 'motherly', cannot be used. The labels must state that breastfeeding is the best way of feeding babies and that a substitute should only be used after consultation with health professionals. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE CODE The baby food industry has been the subject of pointed criticism from NGOs , international agencies and campaign groups for failing to abide by the code. The largest baby food manufacturer in the world, the Swiss giant Nestlé , has been the subject of an international boycott campaign since 1977 for its alleged widespread violation of the Code (see Nestlé Boycott ). On its own, the International Code has no legal power. Companies are only subject to legal censure for failing to abide by the Code where it has been incorporated into the legislature of a nation state. Many countries have fully or partially integrated the provisions of the code into their own laws. Other countries, especially in the developing world, have no legislation on baby food marketing at all. Code violations by baby milk companies are not as widespread as they were in the 1980s. Recent evidence suggests, however, that failure to abide by the provisions of the Code is still a significant cause for concern. The International Baby Food Action Network performs monitoring of baby food marketing in 69 countries across the world both independently and with governments. A study into code violations in Togo and Burkina Faso, West Africa, was published in the '' British Medical Journal '' in 2003. FOOTNOTES |
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