What we don't know about mother's milk | Katie Hinde

137,420 views ・ 2017-04-19

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00:12
Have you ever heard the one about how breastfeeding is free?
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(Laughter)
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Yeah, it's pretty funny,
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because it's only free if we don't value women's time and energy.
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Any mother can tell you how much time and energy it takes
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to liquify her body --
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to literally dissolve herself --
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(Laughter)
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as she feeds this precious little cannibal.
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(Laughter)
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Milk is why mammals suck.
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At Arizona State University,
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in the Comparative Lactation Lab,
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I decode mothers' milk composition
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to understand its complexity
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and how it influences infant development.
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The most important thing that I've learned
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is that we do not do enough to support mothers and babies.
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And when we fail mothers and babies,
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we fail everyone who loves mothers and babies:
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the fathers, the partners, the grandparents, the aunties,
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the friends and kin that make our human social networks.
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It's time that we abandon simple solutions and simple slogans,
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and grapple with the nuance.
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I was very fortunate
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to run smack-dab into that nuance very early,
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during my first interview with a journalist
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when she asked me,
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"How long should a mother breastfeed her baby?"
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And it was that word "should" that brought me up short,
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because I will never tell a woman what she should do with her body.
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Babies survive and thrive
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because their mother's milk is food, medicine and signal.
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For young infants,
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mother's milk is a complete diet
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that provides all the building blocks for their bodies,
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that shapes their brain
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and fuels all of their activity.
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Mother's milk also feeds the microbes
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that are colonizing the infant's intestinal tract.
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Mothers aren't just eating for two,
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they're eating for two to the trillions.
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Milk provides immunofactors that help fight pathogens
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and mother's milk provides hormones that signal to the infant's body.
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But in recent decades,
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we have come to take milk for granted.
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We stopped seeing something in plain sight.
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We began to think of milk as standardized, homogenized, pasteurized,
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packaged, powdered, flavored and formulated.
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We abandoned the milk of human kindness
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and turned our priorities elsewhere.
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At the National Institutes of Health
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in Washington DC
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is the National Library of Medicine,
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which contains 25 million articles --
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the brain trust of life science and biomedical research.
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We can use keywords to search that database,
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and when we do that,
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we discover nearly a million articles about pregnancy,
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but far fewer about breast milk and lactation.
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When we zoom in on the number of articles just investigating breast milk,
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we see that we know much more about coffee, wine and tomatoes.
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(Laughter)
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We know over twice as much about erectile dysfunction.
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(Laughter)
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I'm not saying we shouldn't know about those things --
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I'm a scientist, I think we should know about everything.
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But that we know so much less --
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(Laughter)
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about breast milk --
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the first fluid a young mammal is adapted to consume --
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should make us angry.
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Globally, nine out of 10 women will have at least one child in her lifetime.
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That means that nearly 130 million babies are born each year.
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These mothers and babies deserve our best science.
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Recent research has shown that milk doesn't just grow the body,
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it fuels behavior and shapes neurodevelopment.
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In 2015, researchers discovered
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that the mixture of breast milk and baby saliva --
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specifically, baby saliva --
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causes a chemical reaction that produces hydrogen peroxide
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that can kill staph and salmonella.
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And from humans and other mammal species,
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we're starting to understand that the biological recipe of milk
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can be different when produced for sons or daughters.
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When we reach for donor milk in the neonatal intensive care unit,
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or formula on the store shelf,
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it's nearly one-size-fits-all.
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We aren't thinking about how sons and daughters may grow at different rates,
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or different ways,
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and that milk may be a part of that.
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Mothers have gotten the message
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and the vast majority of mothers intend to breastfeed,
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but many do not reach their breastfeeding goals.
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That is not their failure;
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it's ours.
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Increasingly common medical conditions like obesity, endocrine disorders,
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C-section and preterm births
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all can disrupt the underlying biology of lactation.
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And many women do not have knowledgeable clinical support.
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Twenty-five years ago,
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the World Health Organization and UNICEF established criteria
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for hospitals to be considered baby friendly --
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that provide the optimal level of support for mother-infant bonding
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and infant feeding.
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Today, only one in five babies in the United States
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is born in a baby-friendly hospital.
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This is a problem,
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because mothers can grapple with many problems
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in the minutes, hours, days and weeks of lactation.
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They can have struggles with establishing latch,
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with pain,
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with milk letdown
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and perceptions of milk supply.
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These mothers deserve knowledgeable clinical staff
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that understand these processes.
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Mothers will call me as they're grappling with these struggles,
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crying with wobbly voices.
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"It's not working.
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This is what I'm supposed to naturally be able to do.
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Why is it not working?"
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And just because something is evolutionarily ancient
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doesn't mean that it's easy or that we're instantly good at it.
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You know what else is evolutionarily ancient?
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(Laughter)
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Sex.
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And nobody expects us to start out being good at it.
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(Laughter)
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Clinicians best deliver quality equitable care
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when they have continuing education
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about how to best support lactation and breastfeeding.
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And in order to have that continuing education,
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we need to anchor it to cutting-edge research
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in both the life sciences and the social sciences,
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because we need to recognize
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that too often
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historical traumas and implicit biases
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sit in the space between a new mother and her clinician.
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The body is political.
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If our breastfeeding support is not intersectional,
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it's not good enough.
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And for moms who have to return for work,
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because countries like the United States do not provide paid parental leave,
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they can have to go back in as short as just a few days after giving birth.
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How do we optimize mother and infant health
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just by messaging about breast milk to moms
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without providing the institutional support
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that facilitates that mother-infant bonding
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to support breastfeeding?
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The answer is: we can't.
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I'm talking to you, legislators,
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and the voters who elect them.
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I'm talking to you, job creators and collective bargaining units,
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and workers, and shareholders.
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We all have a stake in the public health of our community,
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and we all have a role to play in achieving it.
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Breast milk is a part of improving human health.
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In the NICU, when infants are born early or sick or injured,
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milk or bioactive constituents in milk can be critically important.
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Environments or ecologies,
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or communities where there's high risk of infectious disease,
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breast milk can be incredibly protective.
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Where there are emergencies like storms and earthquakes,
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when the electricity goes out,
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when safe water is not available,
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breast milk can keep babies fed and hydrated.
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And in the context of humanitarian crises,
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like Syrian mothers fleeing war zones,
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the smallest drops can buffer babies from the biggest global challenges.
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But understanding breast milk is not just about messaging to mothers
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and policy makers.
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It's also about understanding what is important in breast milk
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so that we can deliver better formulas
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to moms who cannot or do not breastfeed for whatever reason.
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We can all do a better job
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of supporting the diversity of moms raising their babies
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in a diversity of ways.
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As women around the world struggle
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to achieve political, social and economic equality,
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we must reimagine motherhood
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as not the central, core aspect of womanhood,
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but one of the many potential facets of what makes women awesome.
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It's time.
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(Applause)
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