Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Breastfeeding saves lives.

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

Those interested in health should not ignore breastfeeding.  Medical professionals and missionary persons should promote, support and encourage breastfeeding for the health of the mother and her baby.  For example, here are some statistics that occurred frequently on the web during World Breastfeeding Week.

 

About 9 to 10 million children under the age of 5 die each year.  Most of these deaths are preventable.  Thirteen percent of these deaths could be avoided if mothers exclusively breastfed for the first six months of life and continued breastfeeding at least until the child turned two years of age.  According to Lancet, breastfeeding is “the single largest impact on child survival of all preventive interventions!” 

 

Why is so little said about breastfeeding when it is so important to many babies’ health and survival?  Breastfeeding alone could save 1.3 million lives every year.

 

In emergencies, breastfed children do much better.  During the first 3 months of armed conflict in Guinea-Bissau (1998), the mortality rate of non-breastfed children was 6 times higher compared to that of breastfed children in the 9-20 month old age group.  During the earthquake in Indonesia (2006), formula was brought in for breastfeeding babies.  Babies receiving formula doubled their occurrence of diarrhea to 25% while the breastfed babies had a 12% rate of diarrhea.  In Botswana (2005/6) formula was brought in and the water was contaminated.  Non-breastfed babies were 50 times more likely to need hospital treatment and were even dying compared to breastfed babies.  In emergencies, breastfed babies are healthier.

 

In normal times or in an emergency, the best gift a mother can give her baby is to breastfeed exclusively for the first six months and to continue nursing for at least one year…but nursing for two years is even better.  Many professionals are now encouraging mothers to nurse for at least two years.  Even Pope John Paul II encouraged mothers to nurse “up to the second year of life or beyond.”

 

Sheila Kippley

Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood

Natural Family Planning Course: What it should teach

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

Every engaged couple should take a complete course in natural family planning as part of the normal process of preparing for marriage.  Such a course should teach the Seven Standards of ecological breastfeeding, all the signs of fertility and infertility, and the doctrine of the Church regarding birth control.  An NFP course should be an agent of evangelization.  It should not only explain what the Church teaches about birth control and natural family planning, but should also affirm the divinely aided teaching authority of the Church.
      For different approaches on the evil of contraception and for extensive Biblical foundations and ecclesial documentation supporting the doctrine of birth regulation taught by the Church, read Chapters 16, 17 and 18 in Sex and the Marriage Covenant: A Basis for Morality. 

SPECIAL BARGAIN.   We just received the Ignatius Catalog.  It’s promoting a bargain summer sale with lots of good books marked way down.  Sex and the Marriage Covenant is marked down from $17.95 to $5.00.  That is a huge bargain!  Get two, one for your library and one to lend.  But hurry.  This sale lasts only through August 31.  Order directly from Ignatius.  Phone  1-800-651-1531 or  order at wwwignatius.com. 

August 1-7 is World Breastfeeding Week.  Read our daily blogs and learn more about breastfeeding infertility and eco-breastfeeding.

Sheila Kippley
Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach, 2009
Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood, 2005
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor, 2008
Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing, 1974 classic edition, 2008

A good natural family planning course

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

What should couples learn in a balanced or good NFP program?
      By “good” we mean complete.  What couples should learn is far more than just an inexpensive and effective method of spacing babies.  What they will learn in a well-rounded NFP program will include the following:
     •How the fertility-menstrual cycle functions
     •The common signs of fertility and infertility
     •The importance of well-balanced nutrition for healthy fertility
     •Natural ways to enhance fertility 
     •The practical, health-related  reasons for making the NFP-only decision
     •The moral and religious reasons for the NFP-only decision
     •The most accurate way to estimate the “due date”
     •Exclusive breastfeeding
     •The Seven Standards of Ecological breastfeeding
     •The return of fertility after childbirth
     •How to manage special situations

Sheila Kippley
Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach, 2009
Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood, 2005
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor, 2008
Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing, 1974 classic edition, 2008