Centre for Rural Health, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Health Systems Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Capetown, South Africa.
Global Health. 2024 Nov 28;20(1):85. doi: 10.1186/s12992-024-01088-y.
Marketing of commercial milk formula (CMF) is well resourced and has influenced societal beliefs and practices that have undermined breastfeeding. This has occurred despite legislation in many countries largely reflecting the provisions of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes.
A cross-sectional survey was conducted in seven countries: Bangladesh, Mexico, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, United Kingdom and Viet Nam to explore the scope and nature of CMF marketing among pregnant women and mothers. A marketing-research methodology was adopted using convenience sampling of women stratified according to infant feeding practices and the infant's age. Participants were identified in hospitals and clinics, as well as in the street, markets and shopping malls. In each country the sample size comprised 300 pregnant women, 150 mothers of children aged > 18 months who were breastfeeding without giving CMF and 600 women feeding their children with CMF. Data were collected using a questionnaire administered on tablets by trained field workers.
Interviews were conducted with 8528 women between October 2019 and March 2021. Overall, 3095/7480 (41.3%) of women reported exposure to CMF marketing ranging from 3% in Morocco to 92% in Viet Nam. The commonest marketing site in all countries was television, but advertising in-store and in magazines and newspapers was also common. In most countries, CMF advertising on social media, websites and YouTube was less compared to traditional media. Reports of receiving free CMF samples varied from 3.1% in Nigeria to 34.6% in Viet Nam. Health professionals were the most common source of advice to mothers about starting CMF and which CMF brand to use.
The study provides quantitative data about CMF marketing and insights on how marketing companies develop effective messages, helping to explain how individual vulnerabilities or aspirations are integrated into marketing strategies. The findings reaffirm the need for action across political and health domains to counter actions of CMF companies. This will require effective national legislation fully reflecting the Code and action by professional bodies to protect health professionals from targeting by CMF marketing. Marketing-research methods could be employed to develop messaging in support of breastfeeding and breastfeeding-friendly policies.
商业配方奶粉(CMF)的营销资源丰富,其社会观念和实践的影响破坏了母乳喂养。尽管许多国家的立法在很大程度上反映了《国际母乳代用品销售守则》的规定,但这种情况仍在发生。
在七个国家(孟加拉国、墨西哥、摩洛哥、尼日利亚、南非、英国和越南)进行了横断面调查,以探索孕妇和母亲中 CMF 营销的范围和性质。采用营销研究方法,根据婴儿喂养方式和婴儿年龄对妇女进行分层,采用便利抽样。参与者在医院和诊所以及街头、市场和购物中心被发现。在每个国家,样本量包括 300 名孕妇、150 名 18 个月以上正在母乳喂养但未使用 CMF 的儿童的母亲和 600 名用 CMF 喂养儿童的妇女。数据由经过培训的现场工作人员在平板电脑上使用问卷收集。
2019 年 10 月至 2021 年 3 月期间对 8528 名妇女进行了访谈。总体而言,3095/7480(41.3%)名妇女报告接触过 CMF 营销,摩洛哥为 3%,越南为 92%。所有国家最常见的营销地点是电视,但店内、杂志和报纸广告也很常见。在大多数国家,与传统媒体相比,社交媒体、网站和 YouTube 上的 CMF 广告较少。从尼日利亚的 3.1%到越南的 34.6%,报告收到免费 CMF 样品的情况各不相同。卫生专业人员是向母亲提供有关开始使用 CMF 和使用哪种 CMF 品牌的建议的最常见来源。
该研究提供了有关 CMF 营销的定量数据,并深入了解营销公司如何制定有效信息,有助于解释个人弱点或愿望如何融入营销策略。研究结果再次证实,需要在政治和卫生领域采取行动,以对抗 CMF 公司的行动。这将需要充分反映《守则》的有效国家立法,并采取专业机构的行动,保护卫生专业人员免受 CMF 营销的影响。可以采用营销研究方法制定支持母乳喂养和母乳喂养友好政策的信息。