In several households, especially in urban areas, mother's are unable to breastfeed their child due to various reasons including ignorance, lack of motivation, work pressure and work places being not equipped with facilities, they said.
In India, positive trend has been observed in breastfeeding practices over the last decade. According to the National Family Health Survey -IV, 55 per cent of infants are exclusively breastfed for the first six months.
It also helps fight infections and illnesses like diarrhoea, allergies and asthma, among others.
"Breastfeeding also has a positive impact on mothers. Women who breastfeed have a reduced risk of ovarian and breast cancers and metabolic and cardiovascular diseases. It also helps in postpartum weight loss," Dr Stahl said.
According to Dr Raghuram Mallaiah, director of neonatology at Fortis La Femme, which also runs the not-for- profit Breastmilk Foundation here, cow or buffalo's milk for newborns should be avoided.
"Also, once pasteurised, the cow's milk loses all the micro-nutrients like iron, zinc and iodine," he said, adding that cow's milk should be introduced only after first year.
AIIMS head of paediatrics Dr V K Paul said some families wrongly believe that the mother's milk alone is not enough to provide required nutrition to the newborn and choose to supplement it with bovine milk.
Cow's milk allergy is the most common food allergy in young children, Dr Nandan Joshi, head of nutrition science and medical affairs at Danone India said.
The food allergy usually establishes in the first six months of life and the majority of affected children have one or more symptoms involving one or more organ systems, mainly the gastrointestinal tract and/or skin.
"Avoidance of cow's milk protein in any form is the only available treatment," Joshi said.
Meanwhile, as the government is making all efforts to encourage breastfeeding among mothers, infant formula's available in market claim to be an alternative to breast milk.
Although cow's milk is the basis of almost all infant formula, to reduce the negative effect on the infant's digestive system it undergoes processing to be made into an infant formula, Dr Bernd said.
According to WHO recommendations, infants should be exclusively breast fed for the first six months, followed by introduction of complementary feeding at six months along with continued breast feeding up to two years or longer.
The India Newborn Action Plan, developed by the Ministry of Health, is targeting a 75 per cent rate of initiation of breastfeeding within an hour of birth by 2017 and 90 per cent by 2025.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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