That has changed dramatically, thanks in part to Joao Arigio Guerrade Almeida, a chemist who has turned the Brazilian Milk Bank Network into a model studied by other countries and credited with helping slash infant mortality by two thirds.
"Brazil is really the world leader in milk bank development," said Dr Lisa Hammer, a University of Michigan pediatrician who was part of a team visiting the Rio de Janeiro-based network last week.
When a mother is unable to breast feed her baby, due to illness, drug addiction or other problems, the network steps in to offer free milk. Last year, it collected milk from some 150,000 women to nourish about 155,000 babies.
Reaching such success was not easy. Almeida recalled the trouble he saw on his first visit to a Rio milk bank in 1985, at the tail end of the country's two-decade-long military dictatorship.
Almeida lobbied for a ban on the sale of breast milk and sought alternatives to expensive imported equipment. High-end pasteurising machines that cost USD 25,000 were swapped for USD 1,500 Brazilian-made machines used in food-testing laboratories. Jars made for mayonnaise or instant coffee were sterilised to store milk for freezing, replacing imported beaker tubes that had accounted for a whopping 89 per cent of operating costs at Brazilian milk banks.
Brazilian women increasingly are choosing to nurse, with the Health Ministry estimating more than half of mothers now breast feed exclusively for their children's first six months of life. In the United States, that rate is 16.4 per cent, according to the Centres for Disease Control, even though breast feeding is widely seen as the best source of nutrition for infants.
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