The popularity of recommending infant formula — as to 84 per cent of mothers included in a recent survey — might be blamed for the prevalence of malnourishment and stunted children in Pakistan, because uninformed mothers alter the preparation ratio to use less formula without realising its potential consequences. Along with the Breastfeeding Ordinance of 2002, which discourages pharmacies from selling baby formula, Pakistan needs a law for ethical practices by doctors and manufacturing companies. Baby formula should still be sold to mothers who are unable to breastfeed but companies must not be allowed to pay doctors to promote their products. Healthcare professionals should instead promote breastfeeding, as its benefits are numerous and universally acknowledged. Once in the field, many doctors are more about practice, profit and fame than keeping up with ethics and research.
In Pakistan, we have yet to develop a system wherein doctors are forced to act ethically because their careers depend on it. It is urgent that the government make an ethics course for healthcare professionals mandatory and simultaneously create a check and balance system so that helpless infants’ lives are not jeopardised by greedy doctors, uninformed mothers and manufacturing companies that buy off doctors in order to promote their products.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 7th, 2013.
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