Introduction

  • Nationwide flagship programme of Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), Government of India
  • Launched on 5th August 2016 across all States/UTs
  • Renamed and repositioned to highlight “absolute affection” required from family and health system for successful breastfeeding
  • Integrates with Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) guidelines, Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) and “Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding”

Goal

  • Revitalize efforts for promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding practices through health systems to achieve higher exclusive breastfeeding rates and reduce neonatal and under-five mortality

Objectives

  • Build enabling environment through awareness generation activities targeting pregnant and lactating mothers, family members and community for optimal breastfeeding practices
  • Position breastfeeding as critical intervention for child survival and development
  • Strengthen lactation support services at public health facilities by trained healthcare providers (doctors, nurses, ANMs) and skilled community health workers (ASHAs)
  • Incentivize and accredit health facilities demonstrating high breastfeeding performance and adherence to lactation management protocols

Key Components

  • Communication and Demand Generation:
    • Mass media (TV, radio), mid-media (folk media, street plays) and interpersonal communication (IPC)
    • IEC materials focusing on early initiation of breastfeeding (within 1 hour of birth), exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months and continued breastfeeding up to 2 years
  • Capacity Building:
    • Training of trainers (TOT) and cascade training of healthcare providers and ASHA workers on lactation management and breastfeeding counselling
    • Emphasis on antenatal counselling, immediate postnatal support and management of common breastfeeding problems
  • Facility-Level Interventions:
    • Early initiation of breastfeeding and skin-to-skin contact
    • Exclusive breastfeeding till 6 months with no prelacteal feeds
    • Rooming-in, on-demand feeding and avoidance of unnecessary formula
    • Strict implementation of IMS Act 1992 (amended 2003)
    • Lactation management centres / corners at delivery points
  • Community-Level Interventions:
    • ASHA-led home visits for breastfeeding support during antenatal, postnatal and infancy periods
    • Village Health and Nutrition Days (VHND) and Anganwadi centre activities
  • Monitoring, Evaluation and Incentives:
    • Facility accreditation and awards for high-performing delivery points based on breastfeeding indicators
    • Periodic assessment using standardized checklists aligned with revised Ten Steps
    • Integration with HMIS and RCH portal for real-time data

Implementation Strategy

  • Implemented at three levels:
    • Macro level: National and state mass-media campaigns
    • Meso level: All public health facilities (sub-centres, PHCs, CHCs, district hospitals)
    • Micro level: Community outreach through ASHAs and Anganwadi Workers
  • Target beneficiaries: All pregnant and lactating mothers, newborns and infants <6 months
  • Convergence with RMNCH+A, POSHAN Abhiyaan and National Nutrition Mission

Importance and Impact

  • Breastfeeding reduces neonatal mortality by 22% and under-five mortality significantly
  • Prevents diarrhoea, pneumonia and malnutrition
  • Promotes maternal health (reduces postpartum haemorrhage and breast cancer risk)
  • Cost-effective public health intervention aligned with SDG 2 and 3
  • Evidence-based: Supported by WHO/UNICEF guidelines and Lancet series on breastfeeding

Monitoring Indicators

  • Early initiation of breastfeeding (<1 hour)
  • Exclusive breastfeeding rate at 6 months
  • Continued breastfeeding at 1 and 2 years
  • Proportion of facilities accredited under MAA/BFHI