Friday, 8 November 2013

Special Report: How Big Formula Bought China

File photo of a family looking at foreign imported milk powder products at a supermarket in Beijing By Alexandra Harney SHANGHAI (Reuters) - In the two days after Lucy Yang gave birth at Peking University Third Hospital in August 2012, doctors and nurses told the 33-year-old technology executive that while breast milk was the best food for her son, she hadn't produced enough. They advised her instead to start him on infant formula made by Nestle. They told us if we did, and something happened to the child, they wouldn't take any responsibility." For Nestle and other infant formula producers, there is one significant complication for their China business: a 1995 Chinese regulation designed to ensure the impartiality of physicians and protect the health of newborns. It bars hospital personnel from promoting infant formula to the families of babies younger than six months, except in the rare cases when a woman has insufficient breast milk or cannot breastfeed for medical reasons.




via Health News Headlines - Yahoo! News Read More Here..

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