
WHA RESOLUTION 55.25 Infant and young child nutrition
The Fifty-fifth World Health Assembly,
Having considered the draft global strategy for infant and young-child
feeding;
Deeply concerned about the vast numbers of infants and young children who are
still inappropriately fed and whose nutritional status, growth and development,
health and very survival are thereby compromised;
Conscious that every year as much as 55% of infant deaths from diarrhoeal
disease and acute respiratory infections may be the result of inappropriate
feeding practices, that less than 35% of infants worldwide are exclusively
breastfed for even the first four months of life, and that complementary feeding
practices are frequently ill-timed, inappropriate and unsafe;
Alarmed at the degree to which inappropriate infant and young-child feeding
practices contribute to the global burden of disease, including malnutrition and
its consequences such as blindness and mortality due to vitamin A deficiency,
impaired psychomotor development due to iron deficiency and anemia, irreversible
brain damage as a consequence of iodine deficiency, the massive impact on
morbidity and mortality of protein-energy malnutrition, and the later-life
consequences of childhood obesity;
Recognizing that infant and young-child mortality can be reduced through
improved nutritional status of women of reproductive age, especially during
pregnancy, and by exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life, and
with nutritionally adequate and safe complementary feeding through introduction
of safe and adequate amounts of indigenous foodstuffs and local foods while
breastfeeding continues up to the age of two years and beyond;
Mindful of the challenges posed by the ever-increasing number of people affected
by major emergencies, the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and the complexities of modern
lifestyles coupled with continued promulgation of inconsistent messages about
infant and young-child feeding;
Aware that inappropriate feeding practices and their consequences are major
obstacles to sustainable socioeconomic development and poverty reduction;
Reaffirming that mothers and babies form an inseparable biological and social
unit, and that the health and nutrition of one cannot be divorced from the
health and nutrition of the other;
Recalling the Health Assembly's endorsement (resolution WHA33.32), in their
entirety, of the statement and recommendations made by the joint WHO/UNICEF
Meeting on Infant and Young Child Feeding held in 1979; its adoption of the
International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes (resolution
WHA34.22), in which it stressed that adoption of and adherence to the Code were
a minimum requirement; its welcoming of the Innocenti Declaration on the
protection, Promotion and Support of Breastfeeding as a basis for international
health policy and action (resolution WHA44.33); its urging encouragement and
support for all public and private health facilities providing maternity
services so that they become "baby-friendly" (resolution WHA45.34); its urging
ratification and implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child as
a vehicle for family health development (resolution WHA46.27); and its
endorsement, in their entirety, of the World Declaration and Plan of Action for
Nutrition adopted by the International Conference on Nutrition (resolution
WHA46.7);
Recalling also resolutions WHA35.26, WHA37.30, WHA39.28, WHA41.11, WHA43.3,
WHA45.34, WHA46.7, WHA47.5, WHA49.15 and WHA54.2 on infant and young-child
nutrition, appropriate feeding practices and related questions;
Recognizing the need for comprehensive national policies on infant and
young-child feeding, including guidelines on ensuring appropriate feeding of
infants and young children in exceptionally difficult circumstances;
Convinced that it is time for governments to renew their commitment to
protecting and promoting the optimal feeding of infants and young children,
1. ENDORSES the global strategy for infant and young-child feeding;
2. URGES Member States, as a matter of urgency:
(1) to adopt and implement the global strategy, taking into account national
circumstances, while respecting positive local traditions and values, as part of
their overall nutrition and child-health policies and programs, in order to
ensure optimal feeding for all infants and young children, and to reduce the
risks associated with obesity and other forms of malnutrition;
(2) to strengthen existing, or establish new, structures for implementing the
global strategy through the health and other concerned sectors, for monitoring
and evaluating its effectiveness, and for guiding resource investment and
management to improve infant and young-child feeding;
(3) to define for this purpose, consistent with national circumstances:
(a) national goals and objectives,
(b) a realistic timeline for their achievement,
(c) measurable process and output indicators that will permit accurate
monitoring and evaluation of action taken and a rapid response to identified
needs;
(4) to ensure that the introduction of micronutrient interventions and the
marketing of nutritional supplements do not replace, or undermine support for
the sustainable practice of, exclusive breastfeeding and optimal complementary
feeding;
(5) to mobilize social and economic resources within society and to engage them
actively in implementing the global strategy and in achieving its aims and
objectives in the spirit of resolutions WHA49.15;
3. CALLS UPON other international organizations and bodies, in particular ILO,
FAO, UNICEF, UNHCR, UNFPA and UNAIDS, to give high priority, within their
respective mandates and programs and consistent with guidelines on conflict of
interest, to provision of support to governments in implementing this global
strategy, and invites donors to provide adequate funding for the necessary
measures;
4. REQUESTS the Codex Alimentarius Commission to continue to give full
consideration, within the framework of its operational mandate, to action it
might take to improve the quality standards of processed foods for infants and
young children and to promote their safe and proper use at an appropriate age,
including through adequate labelling, consistent with the policy of WHO, in
particular the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes,
resolution WHA54.2, and other relevant resolutions of the Health Assembly;
5. REQUESTS the Director-General:
(1) to provide support to Member States, on request, in implementing this
strategy, and in monitoring and evaluating its impact;
(2) to continue, in the light of the scale and frequency of major emergencies
worldwide, to generate specific information and develop training materials aimed
at ensuring that the feeding requirements of infants and young children in
exceptionally difficult circumstances are met;
(3) to strengthen international cooperation with other organizations of the
United Nations system and bilateral development agencies in promoting
appropriate infant and young-child feeding;
(4) to promote continued cooperation with and among all parties concerned with
implementing the global strategy.
Ninth plenary meeting, 18 May 2002
A55/VR/9