Extended Breastfeeding and the Law
Elizabeth N. Baldwin
from Breastfeeding Abstracts,
February 2001, Volume 20, Number 3, pp. 19-20.
Misinformation about breastfeeding
affects everyone in our society, including lawyers, judges, psychologists,
and social workers. While there is no harm in breastfeeding past infancy
and allowing a child to wean naturally, many professionals in social
service agencies and family law courts are quite shocked to learn just
how long a child may breastfeed. Lacking accurate information, these
officials may overreact and conclude that breastfeeding a child of two,
three, or four is somehow improper. As more mothers nurse longer, healthcare
and lactation professionals need to be aware of legal issues surrounding
extended breastfeeding, so that they can educate their counterparts
in the legal and social service systems.
Breastfeeding and the Courts
The issue of extended breastfeeding
has been raised numerous times in United States courts, in both social
service agency and family law cases. There are older reports of family
law cases in which the court’s custody decision was affected by
the belief that the child should have been weaned at an earlier age.1
However, a more recent custody case recognized that it was not inappropriate
to breastfeed past infancy and discounted the father’s claims
that it was detrimental to the child ’s development.2 It is not
uncommon for fathers to raise questions about extended breastfeeding
to gain leverage in custody decisions, even fathers who were supportive
of long-term breastfeeding prior to the divorce. This tactic has been
shown to work. After all, what do judges know about breastfeeding!
Social service agencies have
looked at the issue of extended breastfeeding numerous times over the
past ten years, but not one social service agency has upheld any finding
that extended breastfeeding constitutes abuse or neglect, or is in any
way harmful to the child. In only two situations has a child been removed
from the home. Several years ago, a social service agency in Colorado
removed a five-year-old child because the mother was still breastfeeding,
but the court ordered the child to be immediately returned to his family.
Last year, in Illinois, a child was removed from the mother ’s
custody to foster care for over six months because a judge issued an
initial finding that the child was at risk of serious emotional harm
because of not being weaned. This case received a great deal of publicity.
Though the case is still in the process of being resolved, the child
has been returned to his mother, and the judge has vacated the finding
of neglect.
In 1992, in a highly publicized
case in New York State, a mother claimed that she had lost custody of
her child for a year because she was breastfeeding at age three. This
mother had reported experiences of sexual arousal during breastfeeding,
and authorities removed the child from the home, for fear that this
mother might sexually abuse this child. Later, the social service agency
in New York that took this action issued a formal statement, saying
that there was more to this case than could be disclosed to the press,
due to confidentiality laws. The statement also added that extended
breastfeeding or even arousal during breastfeeding were not reasons
for removing a child from a mother’s custody. Over the next few
years, other social service agencies have also investigated cases related
to extended breastfeeding, but have not removed children from their
homes. These cases have been closed once officials received accurate
information about extended breastfeeding and natural weaning. Breastfeeding,
at any age, is not abuse or neglect.
Information about Weaning
Mothers who allow their child
to wean naturally are being responsive to the child’s need. Contrary
to the suspicions of those in our society who view breastfeeding as
somehow being a sexual act, mothers who nurse older children are not
satisfying pathological needs of their own.
Mothers who have breastfed
past infancy rarely expected to nurse for so long, but they continue
because it is so important to their child. At one time children all
over the world were breastfed until they weaned naturally. It is only
in our modern society that extended breastfeeding has fallen so far
out of fashion that it is viewed as an abnormal act.
Breastfeeding experts do
not advocate a specific age for weaning, as this is a personal decision
for each mother and child. Authorities do suggest that it is best to
let children wean naturally. For instance, the American Academy of Pediatrics
recommends that all babies be breastfed for at least one year, or as
long as mutually desirable.3 In support of this recommendation, the
AAP’s statement cites a study that discusses the age of weaning
among American women who practice extended breastfeeding. Weaning ages
in the study extend through age 6.4
Many people are surprised
to learn that experts consider 4 or 5 years to be the average age of
weaning worldwide.5 Research by Dr. Katherine Dettwyler, anthropologist
at Texas A&M University, argues that the natural weaning age for
human beings falls between 2.5 and 6 years of age.6 An informal survey
conducted by Dr. Dettwyler indicated that many more women in the United
States are nursing children past infancy, and she has reports of children
as old as ten years old still breastfeeding. So many women are breastfeeding
past infancy that two books on the subject have chapters on nursing
past age four (MOTHERING YOUR NURSING TODDLER, by Norma Jane Bumgarner,
and The Nursing Mother’s Guide to Weaning, by Kathleen Huggins).7, 8
Many people, however, are not familiar with the idea of extended breastfeeding,
since older nursing children do not nurse frequently or urgently, and
most mothers nursing an older child do not do so openly in public. They
may not even admit to their doctors that they are still breastfeeding.
It is ironic that our society does not seem to object to children sucking
their fingers, pacifiers, or bottles past infancy, but many are outraged
when a child who can walk and talk is still breastfeeding. Because our
culture tends to view the breast as sexual, it can be hard for people
to realize that breastfeeding is the natural way to nurture children.
More and more experts and
professionals are encouraging extended breastfeeding, as there is substantial
evidence that health benefits continue and increase the longer the child
breastfeeds. The current recommendations of the World Health Organization
and UNICEF are for all mothers to breastfeed until age 2 or beyond.
Studies have shown that the antibodies and immunities in a mother’s
milk are more concentrated the longer she nurses, to make up for the
fact that the child does not nurse as often. Recent studies also indicate
that extended periods of breastfeeding offer mothers protection against
breast cancer.9, 10
Children who nurse past infancy
have their own developmental timetables. Many nurse for only a few minutes
at bedtime, upon waking, or at nap time. Some may go days or even weeks
without asking to nurse. Some wean only to resume nursing when stressful
events occur in their lives, such as the birth of a sibling. When little
ones get sick, most mothers find that the amount of nursing increases.
Breastfeeding is primarily for comfort as children pass their first
birthday, and there is nothing wrong with that. Some people may assume
that if a child is nursing past infancy, it must be influenced by the
mother ’s desires or wishes. To the contrary, the child is the
one who determines if breastfeeding is going to continue. It is well
known in the field of lactation that it is very difficult to make a
child breastfeed.
The Professional’s
Responsibility
Health professionals, social
service workers, and judges and lawyers in the field of family law need
to become informed about extended breastfeeding. The good intentions
of a poorly informed professional can result in a false report of abuse,
or even a child being placed in foster care needlessly. Personal feelings
or beliefs about breastfeeding should not be allowed to affect professional
judgment. Unfortunately, women have been reported to social service
agencies for extended breastfeeding by the very professionals from whom
they sought help. Several years ago in Florida, a mental health professional
reported a client to social services for allowing a five-year-old child
to try breastfeeding again after he had weaned. The father was attempting
to use this incident as a weapon against the mother in a family law
situation. The therapist unwittingly went along with the father’s
concern, and reported that the mother-child relationship was dysfunctional.
When caseworkers at the social service agency learned more about extended
breastfeeding and weaning, the case was closed.
If a mother is reported
to a social service agency for extended breastfeeding, or if the issue
arises in a divorce or family law case, health professionals can assist
by providing accurate information about the issue to everyone involved.
Most of the time this sharing of information resolves the situation.
If it does not, direct testimony from an expert may be needed to resolve
the case in the mother’s favor.
Elizabeth N. Baldwin
is an attorney, certified family mediator, and La Leche League Leader
in Miami, Florida. Her practice concentrates primarily on family law
cases where extended breastfeeding and mother-child separation are at
issue. Ms. Baldwin is a member of La Leche League’s Professional
Advisory Board, Legal Advisory Council.
REFERENCES
1. Shunk v. Walker, 589
A. 2d 1303 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1991); Friendshuh v. Headlough, 504 N.
W. 2d 104 (S. D. 1993); In the Matter of the Marriage of Holcomb, 888
P. 2d 1046 (Or. Ct. App. 1995).
2. Hoplamazian v. Hoplamazian,
740 So. 2d 1100 (Ala. App. 1999)
3. American Academy of Pediatrics
Work Group on Breastfeeding. Breastfeeding and the use of human milk.
Pediatrics 1997; 1000:1035-39.
4. Sugarman, M. and K. A.
Kendall-Tackett. Weaning ages in a sample of American women who practice
extended breastfeeding. Clin Pediatr 1995; 34:642-47.
5. Lawrence, R. A. and R.
M. Lawrence. Breastfeeding:A Guide for the Medical Profession.
St. Louis: Mosby, 1999.
6. Dettwyler, K. A. A time
to wean. BREASTFEEDING ABSTRACTS 1994; 14:3-4.
7. Bumgarner, N. J. MOTHERING
YOUR NURSING TODDLER. Schaumburg: La Leche League International, 2000.
8. Huggins, K. and L. Ziedrich.
The Nursing Mother’s Guide to Weaning. Boston: Harvard Common
Press, 1994.
9. Layde, P. M. et al. The
independent associations of parity, age at first full- term pregnancy,
and duration of breastfeeding with the risk of breast cancer. J Clin
Epidemiol 1989; 42:966-72.
10. Newcomb, P. A. et al.
Lactation and a reduced risk of premenopausal breast cancer. New
Engl J Med 1994; 332:81-87.
Page last edited Sun Oct 14 09:32:41 UTC 2007.