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GLOBAL DOCUMENTS

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SUMMARY OF THE INTERNATIONAL CODE OF MARKETING OF BREAST-MILK SUBSTITUTES AND ALL RELEVANT SUBSEQUENT WHA RESOLUTIONS

Aim
To contribute to the provision of safe and adequate nutrition for infants by the protection and promotion of breastfeeding and the proper use of breastmilk substitutes, when these are necessary, on the basis of adequate information and through appropriate marketing and distribution.
Scope
Breastmilk substitutes* 1 or any food being marketed or otherwise represented as a partial or total replacement for breastmilk, including:
  • Infant formula
  • Follow-up formula (also referred to as follow-on formula or Stage 2 milk)*

  • Growing-up milk (also referred to as toddler milk or Stage 3 milk)*

  • Any other milk marketed for children 0 < 36 months*

  •  Any other food or liquid (such as cereal, jarred food, infant tea, juice and mineral water) that is represented as suitable to be fed to infants less than six months of age.*

  • Feeding bottles and teats.

Promotion
No advertising or promotion of above products to the public. No nutrition or health claims on products.* ^ 2
Samples
No free samples to mothers, their families or health care workers.
Health care facilities
No promotion of products, i.e. no product displays, posters, calendars or distribution of promotional materials. No mothercraft nurses or similar corporation- paid personnel.
Health care workers
No gifts or samples to health care workers. Financial support and incentives should not create conflicts of interest. ^ 3
Supplies
No free or low-cost supplies of breastmilk substitutes to any part of the health care system. ^ 4
Information
Information and education materials must explain the benefits of breastfeeding, the health hazards associated with bottle-feeding and the costs of using infant formula. Product information must be factual and scientific. Governments to avoid conflicts of interest so materials under infant and young child programs should not be sponsored by manufacturers and distributors.^ 5
Labels
Product labels must clearly state the superiority of breastfeeding, the need for the advice of a health care worker and a warning about health hazards. No pictures of infants, other pictures, or text idealizing the use of infant formula. Labels must contain the warning that powdered infant formula may contain pathogenic microorganisms and must be prepared and used appropriately.^ 5 Labels on complementary foods should not cross-promote breastmilk substitutes, should not promote bottle-feeding, and should state the importance of continued breastfeeding.^ 6
Quality
Unsuitable products, such as sweetened condensed milk, should not be promoted for babies. All products should be of a high quality (Codex Alimentarius Standards) and take account of the climatic and storage conditions of the country where they are used.

*Clarified and extended by the WHO Guidance on ending the inappropriate promotion of foods for infants and young children Guidance in WHA Resolution 69.9 [2016].

^ Code provisions have been clarified and extended by subsequent World Health Assembly Resolutions.
1 WHA49.15 [1996], WHA54.2 [2001] & WHA63.23 [2010]

2 WHA58.32 [2005] & WHA63.23 [2010]

3 WHA49.15 [1996] & WHA58.32 [2005]

4 WHA47.5 [1994] v. WHA58.32 [2005]

5 WHA58.32 [2005]

6 WHA69.9

TECHNICAL DOCUMENTS

International Code and Relevant WHA Resolutions

International Code of Marketing of Breast-Milk Substitutes | 1981

WHA34.22 - International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes | 1981

WHA35.26 - International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes | 1982

WHA37.30 - Infant and young child nutrition | 1984

WHA39.28 - Infant and young child feeding | 1986

WHA41.11 - Infant and young child nutrition | 1988

WHA43.3 - Protecting promoting and supporting breast-feeding | 1990

WHA45.34 - Infant and young child nutrition and status of implementation of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes | 1992

WHA47.5 - Infant and young child nutrition | 1994

WHA49.15 - Infant and young child nutrition | 1996

WHA54.2 - Infant and young child nutrition | 2001

WHA55.25 - Infant and young child nutrition | 2002

WHA58.32 - Infant and young child nutrition | 2005

WHA59.11 – Infant and young child nutrition and HIV | 2006

WHA59.21 - Infant and young child nutrition | 2006

WHA61.20 - Infant and young child nutrition: biennial progress report | 2008

WHA63.23 - Infant and young child nutrition | 2010

WHA65/6 - Comprehensive implementation plan on maternal, infant and young child nutrition | 2012

A67/DIV3 - Decision and list of resolutions: WHA67(9) Maternal, infant and young child nutrition | 2014 

A69/7 Add. 1 - Maternal, infant and young child nutrition - Report by the Secretariat
Guidance on ending the inappropriate promotion of foods for infants and young children Provisional agenda item 12.1
| 2016

WHA69.7 - Ending inappropriate promotion of foods for infants and young children
Agenda item 12.1
| 2016

WHA71.9 - Infant nutrition and breastfeeding Agenda item 12.6 | 2018

WHA73.26 - Maternal, infant and young child nutrition Agenda item 15.2 | 2020

WHA75.21 - Maternal, infant and young child nutrition Agenda item 18.1 | 2022

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