Friday, March 12, 2010

Triangle Breastfeeding Alliance, Inc.

Start Healthy Stay Healthy

March Meeting Reminder

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 26 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Triangle Breastfeeding Alliance

Our Goal: To provide networking and education for the people who care for breastfeeding families in the Triangle area.

Our Mission: To increase the number of mothers who achieve their personal breastfeeding goals and their satisfaction with the care and support that they receive.

Here is the agenda for our March 2nd meeting. Please look it over to see if you need to bring any information with you to our meeting on Tuesday at 1:00 in the Andrews Center at WakeMed.

Please read the article about Michelle Obama’s not speaking out to endorse breastfeeding yet and view the short video about three generations of black women.

http://www.womensradio.com/articles/Michelle-Obama-Urged-to-Speak-Out-for-Breastfeeding/4437.html?sms_ss=email

Thank you for your enthusiasm and support for breastfeeding families,

Mary

A Chemical That Shouldn’t Be In Breast Milk

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 26 - 2010 1 COMMENT

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/02/26/358315/a-chemical-that-shouldnt-be-in.html

BY KRISTIE MATHER AND JESSICA NAKELL BURROUGHS
Tags: news | opinion – editorial | point of view

DURHAM — Last week, a friend e-mailed us a disturbing new scientific study titled “Younger mothers’ breast milk has highest levels of flame retardants.” According to researchers at the UNC School of Public Health, nearly three-quarters of 300 North Carolina mothers studied had some amount of toxic flame-retardants, known as polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), in their breast milk.

PBDEs are common flame-retardants used to slow the spread of fires. They are used in household products such as computers, televisions, mattresses and textiles. These chemicals, which have been shown to be toxic to the brain and hormone system (and also have safer, nontoxic alternatives), end up in our bodies.

In addition to the load that any child accumulates through his own exposure, finding PBDEs in breast milk means that breast-fed infants will receive an additional dose of this brain toxin. Babies and children are at greater risk from chemicals that affect their developing bodies than are adults, making this all the more alarming.

We both breast-fed our sons, feeling confident that breast milk is always the “best milk” for babies. However, it is maddening to know that along with all the wonderful benefits we were delivering to our babies – antibodies, healthy fats and immune-system boosts – we were also serving up a dose of toxic chemicals.

Pregnant and lactating women are strongly urged to eat a healthful diet, exercise, avoid cigarette smoke, decrease stress and generally adopt habits to ensure that their infants have the best possible prenatal environment. But no one told us to avoid environmental toxins, and even if they did, with these chemicals pervasive in our world, there is very little that we could have done.

How could our country have let this happen?

The problem goes back more than 30 years. In 1976, President Gerald Ford signed the Toxic Substances Control Act. TSCA was intended to protect us from toxic chemicals but has proven to be dangerously ineffective. The law grandfathered in all 60,000 chemicals used in consumer products at the time. The result is that chemicals used in consumer products are virtually unregulated. This is surely a system that takes too many risks with our children’s health.

What can we do? We need to update TSCA to ensure that chemicals are proven safe before they end up in consumer products and ultimately our bodies. Congress is expected to take up a bill that does just that, and North Carolina Reps. G.K. Butterfield and Sue Myrick are members of House committees that will be front and center in the process.

We look forward to working with them to ensure that the bill requires manufacturers to provide basic health and safety information on chemicals before they enter the marketplace and that we take immediate action on chemicals like PBDEs, which persist in our bodies and environment.

We will continue to be confident that we made the right choice to breast-feed our children because the multitude of health and emotional benefits outweigh the PBDE risks. But we think all children should be able to derive those benefits without also paying the price of higher PBDE exposure.

We will continue to ensure that mothers and children have a strong voice as the debate to reform TSCA takes shape in Congress. Our elected representatives should do everything they can to get toxic chemicals out of our bodies so that mothers do not have to stop and question whether breastfeeding might harm our children. It is time that we move away from the “chemical of the day” headlines and move toward a system that truly ensures that a mother’s milk is free of toxic chemicals.

Kristie Mather and Jessica Nakell Burroughs are with Triangle Moms Rising, a founding member of the Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families coalition (www.saferchemicals.org).

The Breast Whisperer

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 23 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Check out this awesome article NY Times did profiling a lactation consultant in the NY area

The Breast Whisperer

Also check out this blog for comments on this article-

Let’s Move-Michelle Obama’s Initiative

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 20 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Michelle Obama has a new initiative about preventing obesity and she believes as we do that it begins with breastfeeding.  This is great to her as an advocate in our favor.

BF Let’s move Michelle Obama Initative-1

In Memory of Mary Rose Tully

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 18 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

“In her last days mom agreed to allow us to establish The Mary Rose Tully Education Fund, a fund which will be used to create a trust for her precious granddaughter Anika’s future educational needs, and to initiate an ongoing scholarship fund for graduate breastfeeding education at the UNC School of Public Health Department of Maternal and Child Health to carry on Mary’s passion for her life’s work.  A small amount may be used for Mary’s unpaid medical bills, if there are any.  If you wish to donate to the fund and prefer to direct your contribution to a specific purpose, please indicate that on your check. Any personal notes to Mary’s family will be delivered to them.

Please send gifts, in lieu of flowers, to:

The Mary Rose Tully Education Fund
c/o Karen Britt Peeler, Attorney-at-Law
P.O. Box 12154
Raleigh, NC  27605

If you prefer to donate to the UNC Scholarship Fund directly:

To donate on-line visit:
http://www.sph.unc.edu/make_a_gift/?gift_type=0

under “Select a School Fund”
designate: Other
under “Other Instructions”
enter: “Mary Rose Tully Training Initiative

To mail a check(made payable to: “Gillings School of Global Public Health”, with the “Mary Rose Tully Training Initiative” in the memo line):

Kembrie Greene
Office of External Affairs
UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health
107 Rosenau Hall
Campus Box 7400
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599-7400″

Chris Tully

The Risks of Not Breastfeeding for Mothers and Infants

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 18 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Alison Stuebe, MD, MSc

Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC

“Health outcomes in developed countries differ substantially for mothers and infants who formula feed compared with those who breastfeed. For infants, not being breastfed is associated with an increased incidence of infectious morbidity, as well as elevated risks of childhood obesity, type 1 and type 2 diabetes, leukemia, and sudden infant death syndrome. For mothers, failure to breastfeed is associated with an increased incidence of premenopausal breast cancer, ovarian cancer, retained gestational weight gain, type 2 diabetes, myocardial infarction, and the metabolic syndrome. Obstetricians are uniquely positioned to counsel mothers about the health impact of breastfeeding and to ensure that mothers and infants receive appropriate, evidence-based care, starting at birth.”
Rev Obstet Gynecol. 2009;2(4):222-231 doi: 10.3909/riog0093]

Click here for rest of article

USLCA February Newsletter

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 17 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Check out USLCA  February newsletter                              

This issue has articles that include:

Chapter news, Committees and Liaisons, mourning of two Pioneers in lactation, lactation survey, and upcoming webinars

click here for the newsletter

Nursing Our Future

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 15 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

A truly beautiful way to advertise to benefits of breastfeeding.

HMN members from across North America submitted photos of themselves proudly breastfeeding their children – everywhere from the Eiffel Tower to the Brooklyn Bridge – for the Nursing Our Future video featured on the organization’s website.

http://www.holisticmoms.org/category/news-events/nursing-our-future/

February Minutes Updated

Posted by NCTBA.org On February - 14 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

If you like to stay updated on what happens at our meetings but were unable to attend our last meeting here are our current minutes.

Triangle Breastfeeding Alliance would love for you to join us at our next meeting.

Here is our March agenda.

For more information on joining us

Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)

Transmission of Yellow Fever Vaccine Virus Through Breast-Feeding

Brazil, 2009
Weekly
February 12, 2010 / 59(05);130-132

In April, 2009, the state health department of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, was notified by the Cachoeira do Sul municipal health department of a case of meningoencephalitis requiring hospitalization in an infant whose mother recently had received yellow fever vaccine during a postpartum visit. The Field Epidemiology Training Program of the Secretariat of Surveillance in Health of the Brazilian Ministry of Health assisted state and municipal health departments with an investigation. This report summarizes the results of that investigation, which determined that the infant acquired yellow fever vaccine virus through breast-feeding. The mother reported 2 days of headache, malaise, and low fever occurring 5 days after receipt of yellow fever vaccine. The infant, who was exclusively breast-fed, was hospitalized at age 23 days with seizures requiring continuous infusion of
intravenous anticonvulsants. The infant received antimicrobial and antiviral treatment for meningoencephalitis. The presence of 17DD yellow fever virus was detected by reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in the infant’s cerebrospinal fluid (CSF); yellow fever–specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies also were present in
serum and CSF. The infant recovered completely, was discharged after 24 days of hospitalization, and has had normal neurodevelopment and growth through age 6 months. The findings in this report provide documentation that yellow fever vaccine virus can be transmitted via breast-feeding.  Administration of yellow fever vaccine to breast-feeding women should be avoided except in situations where exposure to yellow fever viruses cannot be avoided or postponed.

On March 23, the mother, aged 22 years, delivered a healthy female infant at 39 weeks’ gestational age by elective cesarean delivery. During that same month, a yellow fever epidemic had spread to a nonendemic area in Rio Grande do Sul state where the mother resided (1). On April 7, when the mother was 15 days postpartum, she visited her health-care provider to have the sutures removed from her caesarean incision. While in the provider’s office, she received 17DD yellow fever vaccine. She had not been vaccinated
for yellow fever previously. On April 12, 5 days after receiving the vaccine, she reported a headache, malaise, and low fever, which persisted for 2 days. The mother did not seek medical care for her symptoms.

On April 15, 2009, the mother’s infant, aged 23 days, developed fever, and irritability and refused to nurse. The next day, the infant exhibited seizure-like activity and was admitted to the hospital for evaluation of possible meningoencephalitis. Upon admission, the infant experienced unilateral left upper extremity clonic convulsions of increasing frequency
requiring intravenous diazepam (0.15 mg). Perioral cyanosis was noted and oxygen saturation measured by arterial blood gas was pO2 60 (normal: pO2 80–100). A chest radiograph showed no infiltrate. Peripheral white blood cell (WBC) count was 25,400/mm3 (normal: 5,000–20,000 WBC/mm3) and platelet count was 393,000/mm3 (normal: =150,000 platelets/mm3). Laboratory examination of CSF was unremarkable, with a WBC count of 1/mm3 (normal: 0–5 WBC/mm3), slight elevation of protein (67 mg/dL [normal: 15—45 mg/dL]), and decreased glucose concentration (37 mg/dL [normal: 42—78 mg/dL]). Gram stain of the CSF specimen revealed no bacteria. The infant received oxygen therapy, intravenous dipyrone (0.1 mL every 6 hours) and phenytoin (10 mg every 12 hours), and empiric treatment for bacterial infection with ampicillin and gentamicin. On April 18, empiric acyclovir treatment was added. No specimens for bacterial or fungal cultures were obtained. Other etiologies for meningoencephalitis were ruled out by testing of serum and CSF samples for dengue-specific IgM; viral culture for herpes simplex, cytomegalovirus, and varicella; and RT-PCR for enteroviruses, all of which were negative.

The infant alternated between periods of somnolence and irritability, without clinical improvement. On April 19, convulsions became more frequent (one episode every 10 minutes) and difficult to control, with persistent perioral cyanosis, resulting in transfer to the pediatric ICU for continuous infusion of anticonvulsants and monitoring of oxygen saturation. A second CSF examination showed a WBC count of 128/mm3, a protein concentration of 106 mg/dL, and a glucose concentration of 24 mg/dL. Computerized tomography of the head demonstrated bilateral symmetrical areas of diffuse low density suggestive of inflammation consistent with encephalitis.

After the second CSF examination on April 19, the mother mentioned receiving yellow fever vaccine 8 days before the infant’s onset of symptoms, and a serum and CSF sample from the infant were sent to the arbovirus reference laboratory at Adolfo Lutz Institute in São Paulo, Brazil, to test for the presence of 17DD yellow fever vaccine virus. Yellow
fever-specific IgM antibodies were detected in serum and CSF. Yellow fever viral RNA was amplified by RT-PCR (2,3) from a CSF specimen collected on April 19; the nucleotide sequence of the amplified PCR product was identical to 17DD yellow fever vaccine virus. No breast milk or maternal serum was collected for yellow fever virus testing.

The infant recovered completely and was discharged from the hospital without sequelae on May 10, 2009. Follow-up of the infant showed normal neurodevelopment and growth through age 6 months. The Brazilian Committee on Vaccine-Associated Adverse Events classified the child’s encephalitis as yellow fever vaccine–associated neurologic disease. To rule out the possibility that the infant had received yellow fever vaccine inadvertently, the investigators reviewed all procedures documented in the medical record performed between the infant’s birth and onset of symptoms. The child had received intramuscular vitamin K and hepatitis B vaccine on the day of birth. Two other children born on the same day had received hepatitis B vaccine from the same lot of vaccine as the one registered in the child’s vaccination record, and neither experienced similar symptoms.

Reported by
A Mallmann Couto, MD, M Ribeiro Salomão, MD, Hospital de Caridade de Cachoeira do Sul; MT Schermann, MD, R Mohrdieck, MD, Rio Grande do Sul State Health Dept, Porto Alegre; A Suzuki, Adolfo Lutz Institute, São Paulo; SM Deotti Carvalho, National Immunization Program, Secretariat of Surveillance in Health (SVS), Ministry of Health (MoH), Brasilia; DM de Assis, Brazilian Field Epidemiology Training Program (EPISUS) and Vector-borne Diseases and Anthropozoonoses Surveillance, SVS, MoH, Brasilia; W Navegantes Araújo, DVM, EPISUS, SVS, MoH, Brasilia, and Gonçalo Moniz Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, MoH, Salvador; B Flannery, PhD, Pan American Health Organization, Brasilia, Brazil.

Editorial Note

This report describes the first laboratory-confirmed case of yellow fever vaccine–associated neurologic disease occurring in an infant secondary to the transmission of yellow fever vaccine virus through breast milk. The infant described in this report also is the youngest reported case of yellow fever vaccine–associated neurologic disease. The presence of yellow fever-specific IgM in CSF, and 17DD yellow fever vaccine viral RNA in the CSF of the infant indicates transmission and infection with yellow fever vaccine. Following primary vaccination, IgM antibodies generally appear 4–7 days after receipt of vaccine (4). Maternal IgM antibodies can be excreted in breast milk and the presence of serum IgM in the infant alone is not diagnostic of yellow fever virus infection. The detection of IgM antibodies in the infant’s CSF indicates intrathecal antibody production in response to a nervous system infection because IgM does not normally cross the blood brain barrier (5).

Based on the mother’s receipt of yellow fever vaccine on April 7, and onset of symptoms in the infant on April 15, the infant’s infection likely occurred during the expected peak of viremia following vaccination. Neurologic adverse events, including encephalitis, have been described previously in association with yellow fever vaccination; children aged <6
months have the highest incidence of vaccine-associated neurologic events (6). However, only one previous episode of encephalitis, which was not confirmed as vaccine-associated, has been described in an infant exposed to yellow fever vaccine virus through breast-feeding (Public Health Agency of Canada, personal communications, 2009).

Yellow fever vaccine is a live, attenuated virus preparation made from various strains of the 17D yellow fever virus lineage. In Brazil, yellow fever vaccine from the 17DD strain is produced by Bio-Manguinhos, a public sector vaccine manufacturer of the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation of the Brazilian Ministry of Health. Yellow fever vaccine–associated neurologic disease (YEL-AND, formerly known as postvaccinal encephalitis) is reported to occur at a rate of 0.4 cases per 100,000 persons vaccinated in the U.S. population, with highest rates reported among persons aged =60 years (1.6 per 100,000) (6). However, the incidence among infants aged <6 months has been estimated as 0.5–4.0 cases per 1,000 infants vaccinated (4). For this reason, administration of 17D-derived yellow fever vaccines is contraindicated in infants aged <6 months (4,7,8).

Yellow fever virus, either wild-type or 17D, has not been reported to have been isolated from or detected in human breast milk. West Nile virus (WNV), another flavivirus, has been detected in milk from WNV-infected, lactating women (9), and one case of probable WNV transmission through breast-feeding has been reported (10). The actual risk for 17DD virus transmission through breast-feeding cannot be characterized because the number of breast-feeding women who have been vaccinated without negative sequelae in their infants is unknown. Based on the theoretical risk for yellow fever vaccine virus transmission through breast milk, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends that yellow fever vaccination of nursing mothers be avoided, except when travel of nursing mothers to high-risk yellow fever–endemic areas cannot be avoided or postponed (7). Vaccine recommendations from the World Health Organization do not include considerations for breast-feeding mothers (8).

In Brazil, yellow fever vaccination is recommended for all residents of municipalities considered at risk for yellow fever transmission, and for travelers to at-risk areas (1). As a result of this investigation, the Brazilian Ministry of Health is revising its recommendations to caution against administration of yellow fever vaccine to breast-feeding women, except in situations where the risk for contracting yellow fever is unavoidable. Further studies on excretion of 17DD virus in breast milk of vaccinated, lactating women would help to define a risk period for viral transmission in cases where vaccination of nursing mothers is necessary.

Acknowledgments

The findings in this report are based, in part, on contributions from M Dallagnol, Municipal Dept of Health and Environment, Cachoeira do Sul; M Corrêa Lenz, M Assunta Bercini, MD, Rio Grande do Sul State Health Dept, Porto Alegre; R de Cássia Compagnoli Carmona, S Pires Curti, Adolfo Lutz Institute, São Paulo; and C Guedes Ramos, G Lima Nascimento, and MA Nunes Medeiros, Brazilian Field Epidemiology Training Program, Brasilia, Brazil.

References
1. Brazilian Ministry of Health. Emergências em Saúde Pública de Importância Nacional (ESPIN) de Febre Amarela Silvestre em São Paulo e no Rio Grande do Sul e a Situação Epidemiológica Atual no Brasil (2008/2009). [Portuguese] Available at
http://portal.saude.gov.br/portal/arquivos/pdf/boletim_febre_amarela_09_12_09.pdf

Embedded image moved to file: pic27595.gif)Adobe PDF fileExternal Web Site Icon. Accessed February 9, 2010.
2. dos Santos CN, Post PR, Carvalho R, Ferreira, II, Rice CM, Galler R.
Complete nucleotide sequence of yellow fever virus vaccine strains
17DD and 17D-213. Virus Res 1995;35:35–41.
3. Wang E, Weaver SC, Shope RE, Tesh RB, Watts DM, Barrett AD. Genetic variation in yellow fever virus: duplication in the 3′ noncoding region of strains from Africa. Virology 1996;225:274–81.
4. Monath TP, Centron MS, Teuwen DE. Yellow fever vaccine. In: Plotkin SA, Orenstein WA, Offit PA, eds. Vaccines. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: WB Saunders; 2008.
5. McMahon AW, Eidex RB, Marfin AA, et al. Neurologic disease associated with 17D-204 yellow fever vaccination: a report of 15 cases. Vaccine 2007;25:1727–34.
6. Khromava AY, Eidex RB, Weld LH, et al. Yellow fever vaccine: an updated assessment of advanced age as a risk factor for serious adverse events. Vaccine 2005;23:3256–63.
7. CDC. Yellow fever vaccine; recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). MMWR 2002;51(No. RR-17).
8. World Health Organization. Yellow fever vaccine: WHO position paper.
Wkly Epidem Rec 2003;78:349–59.
9. Hinckley AF, O’Leary DR, Hayes EB. Transmission of West Nile virus through human breast milk seems to be rare. Pediatrics 2007;119:e666–71.
10. CDC. Possible West Nile virus transmission to an infant through breast-feeding—Michigan, 2002. MMWR 2002;51:877–8.

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