Take
action to stop these violations of the International
Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The people responsible
have names and addresses - call on them to market their products
ethically.
The
tables below give details of some recent violations. The date
when the violation was last reported to Baby Milk Action or confirmed
to be current is given. The violation reference is for Baby Milk
Action's records. Please quote it if forwarding correspondence
to us, if possible.
Nestlé
advertises infant formula in Bulgaria
Company
|
Item
|
Date
|
Violation
Reference
|
Nestlé
(NUMICO also
mentioned)
|
Advertisements
in a parenting magazine
|
June
2000
|
comp/00/12
|
Background:
The International
Code bans the advertising of breastmilk substitutes. Health
workers are given responsibility for advising parents on infant
feeding. In
recent years Western companies have moved aggressively into
the countries of Eastern Europe and former Soviet Union where
controls on marketing are still being developed.
The group Women
and Mothers Against Violence launched the Nestlé
boycott in Bulgaria in August 1999 to target the global market
leader and to raise awareness of the issue (see Boycott
News 26).
Nestlé has
been advertising infant formula in parenting magazines. Other
companies are advertising follow-on formulas, which are also
breastmilk substitutes and are covered by the International
Code.
Let the companies
know they are under scrutiny by writing to the following Chief
Executives using the suggestion given below as a model.
Write to: Mr.
Peter Brabeck-Letmathé, Chief Executive Officer, Nestlé
S.A. 55, Av. Nestlé. CH-1800 Vevey, Switzerland (Fax: +41
21 921 1885):
Nestlé advertises
Nan 1 infant formula in Bulgaria (see
the evidence on this website). Nestlé also encourages
mothers to sign up to its "Mothers Caress" club to
receive free mailings. Mothers are asked to provide information
about their infants and the clinic they visit. Article
5.5 of the International Code bans company marketing
staff from seeking direct or indirect contact with mothers of
infants or young children.
Write to: Mr. Klaas
de Jonge, Director, Numico, Rokkeveemseweg 49, 2712 PJ Zoetermeer,
Netherlands. (Fax: +31 79 3539 620):
NUMICO advertises
follow-on formulas including Nutricia Nutrilon, Milupa Aptamil
and Milupa Milumil.
Key
points for letters:
It is reported
that your company advertises breastmilk substitutes in
Bulgaria. For example, the June 2000 issue of "9
months" parenting magazine contained advertisements
for your products.
Article
5.1 of the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk
Substitutes states:
"There
should be no advertising or other form of promotion
to the general public of products within the scope of
this Code."
Companies are
required to abide by the Code "Independently of
any other measures taken for implementation of this Code"
(Article 11.3)
and the Code was adopted as a "minimum" requirement
for all countries under World Health Assembly Resolution
34.22.
You are very
clearly failing in your responsibilities.
I call on you
to stop advertising breastmilk substitutes in Bulgaria
immediately and to issue a public apology.
|
You could send a
message of support to the Bulgarian Nestlé boycott group:
Women and Mothers Against
Violence, Apartment 18 , Block 40A, 1233 Struga Str., Sofia,
Bulgaria. Fax: +359 2 453048.
Wyeth
(SMA) distributes free samples in UK magazine
Company
|
Item
|
Date
|
Violation
Reference
|
Wyeth
|
Free samples of
SMA Progress follow-on formula distributed in a parenting
magazine.
|
June
2000
|
comp/00/13
|
Background:
The International
Code bans provision of free samples of breastmilk
substitutes to pregnant women and mothers under Article
5.2. Breastmilk substitutes include "bottle-fed
complementary foods" marketed to replace breastmilk
(see the scope of the International Code, Article
2). Follow-on formulas come within this description.
Wyeth is distributing
free sachets of SMA Progress ("just the right amount
to make a single feed") in the parenting magazine
"Pregnancy & Birth" (stuck to the June 2000
advertisement shown here).
|
|
The advertisement
asks: "New SMA Sachets. When do you use yours? Convenient
to carry. Handy at home. Simple for shopping. A doddle for dads
(and mums). Less bother for busy mums. Natural for nursery."
Wyeth attempts to move the product outside the scope of the
International Code by stating in text which is almost
too small to be read: "SMA Progress is not intended
to replace breastfeeding." There is no mention of the
negative effect on breastfeeding of introducing partial bottle
feeding.
Mothers are also
encouraged to contact the SMA "Careline", which violates
Article 5.5 of the International
Code on seeking contact with mothers.
(Wyeth (SMA), has
promoted its products to midwives in the past by offering manicures
- see Update 22. At
a recent conference it attempted to catch attention with a team
of jugglers!).
Write to: Mr. John
R Stafford, CEO, Wyeth, PO Box 8616, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
19101, USA. Fax: +1 610 688 6228. If you are in the UK you can
also complain to your local Trading Standards Office (contact
details in the telephone book).
Key points for letters:
Wyeth is
violating Article
5.2 of the International Code of Marketing of
Breastmilk Substitutes in the UK by distributing
free samples of SMA Progress to pregnant women
and mothers through the magazine Parenting & Birth
(June 2000). Please stop this practice immediately
and give an undertaking that you will abide by the International
Code and susbequent, relevant World Health Assembly
Resolutions in the UK in future.
In advertisements
your company is encouraging mothers to contact the SMA
"Careline". This violates Article
5.5 of the International Code which states:
"Marketing
personnel, in their business capacity, should not
seek direct or indirect contact of any kind with pregnant
women or with mothers of infants and young children."
Please stop
this practice.
|
Nestlé
offensive in Singapore
Company
|
Item
|
Date
|
Violation
Reference
|
Nestlé
|
Encouraging mothers
to join a Nestlé club to receive mailings on nutrition
and weaning.
|
April
2000
|
comp/00/14
|
Background:
Nestlé
is targeting pregnant mothers in Singapore with a baby
club, which promises a newsletter with "useful
tips on nutrition, babycare, weaning and more."
While the materials
do not directly mention infant formula, Nestlé
is using the club to promote other breastmilk substitutes
and infant foods.
Targeting pregnant
mothers with an aritificial feeding philosophy undermines
breastfeeding.
Baby Milk Action
has confirmed with UNICEF's Legal Officer that direct
and indirect contact with pregnant women and mothers of
young children (up to three years of age) is prohibited
by International Code Article
5.5.
|
|
Write to: Mr. Peter
Brabeck-Letmathé, Chief Executive Officer, Nestlé
S.A. 55, Av. Nestlé. CH-1800 Vevey, Switzerland (Fax: +41
21 921 1885).
Key points for letters:
Nestlé
claims to support the International Code of Marketing
of Breastmilk Substitutes. Article
5.5 of the International Code states:
"Marketing
personnel, in their business capacity, should not seek
direct or indirect contact of any kind with pregnant
women or with mothers of infants and young children."
Yet in Singapore
Nestlé is directly targeting pregnant women, encouraging
them to join the Nestlé Baby World Club. Please
bring your activities into line with the marketing requirements
by stopping this marketing scheme immediately.
UNICEF has
made it clear that it is no excuse to argue that the contact
is being sought using products other than infant formula.
The prohibition is absolute.
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You
can be a Code Monitor.
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