HIV AND BREASTFEEDING
The fears. The misconceptions. The facts.
By Celia Farber
Mothering Sept./Oct. 1998
Teresa Hansen, HIV-positive, and mother of two who lives near Los
Angeles, came home one day to find social workers from the bureau
of Child and Family Services (CFS) waiting for her. An anonymous
caller, who Hansen suspects was either her estranged husband or
else his family, had informed CFS that Hansen, despite being HIV
positive, was breastfeeding her child.
"They told me I had two choices," Hansen recalls. "Either I could go
with them and get myself and the baby tested right away, or they
would take the baby with them. It was very threatening."
Needless to say, she went along. She left her elder daughter, who is
HIV-negative, with a neighbor, and got into the car with the CFS
officials. On the way to the testing site, the officials stopped at a
supermarket to buy infant formula, demanding that Hansen cease
breastfeeding her child then and there. They told her that many
studies had shown that HIV can transmit via breastfeeding.
As a conscientious woman who had delivered both of her children at
home and describes herself as "very healthy," Hansen was appalled
when she read the label. "It was nothing but sugar and corn syrup.
That's supposed to keep a baby healthy?"
When the results came back, both Hansen (who at one time had
seroreverted to negative) and the baby tested positive for HIV,
although the little girl was tested only with an extremely unreliable
version of the AIDS test. From that point on, Hansen found herself
being cornered by the very social-services infrastructure that was
supposedly there to protect her. Her ex-husband, Jack, who remained
staunchly orthodox in his views on HIV, AIDS, and medication, took
her to court, arguing that Hansen was "in denial" of her illness and
hence a dangerous mother. The judge eventually told Hansen she had
to put the child on AZT or lose custody. (Jack, who had been taking
several HIV medications, died last year.)
But Hansen had little faith in AZT, believing instead that good health
requires eating well and avoiding most contaminants, including
drugs. For her, breastfeeding represented an extremely crucial
element in bolstering her child's immunity, regardless of her HIV
status. So she continues to breastfeed secretly (which is why she
wished that her real name be withheld), hiding it even from her older
daughter, who is occasionally questioned about her mother's
activities. "This is all so surreal," says Hansen. "They keep calling
me, telling me that they're only here to 'help' me, that I need to plan
a will, and all this. I'm perfectly fine."
Protection, intervention, and treatment efforts aimed at beating
back HIV have grown much more intensive over the years,
culminating today in a barrage of new, high-tech drugs -- often as
many as eight at one time -- that are euphemistically called
"cocktails." At the same time, in the name of fighting HIV, several
long-established medical practices have been disregarded, chief
among them the once-sacrosanct practice of withholding virtually
any drug from a woman during her pregnancy. The standard
prescription now for a pregnant HIV-positive woman is to take AZT
throughout her pregnancy, and to bottle-feed her baby afterward.
Some doctors casually claim that "studies have shown" the HIV virus
to be transmissible via breastmilk, but this is by no means clear.
The Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) claims that
20 percent of babies born to HIV-positive mothers become infected
during pregnancy and delivery, while about 14 percent become
infected during breastfeeding. Worldwide, it estimates, 300 children
are infected each day through breastfeeding, a figure that represents
about 20 percent of the 1,500 children infected each day with HIV.
(1)
But if 1,500 children per day are said to be infected with HIV,
33,000 children under the age of five die each day from preventable
diseases and malnutrition, "against which breastfeeding can provide
an essential defense," according to the International Lactation
Consultants Association's Position Statement on this subject. (2)
For mothers and babies in developing countries, breastmilk is not a
lifestyle choice, but the difference between life and death.
For this reason, the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF
have consistently and strongly recommended breastfeeding in the
Third World, even for HIV-positive women, as a first line of immune
defense against the scores of health problems and diseases that
ravage those populations. WHO recommends that all babies be
breastfed for at least two years.
But in a major reversal of its previous position, UNICEF earlier this
year announced that it was beginning a new, "stepped-up drive to
prevent HIV-AIDS in children," explaining that the agency would
henceforth distribute AZT to pregnant women in developing
countries and call for access to "safe alternatives" to breastfeeding.
(3) The disadvantages of formula are described in terms of cost, not
health.
"The position of UNICEF now is that we want to help HIV-positive
women find viable, safe alternatives to breastfeeding," says UNICEF
Communications Officer Wing-Sie Cheng.
But, of course, such advice raises the specter of the tragedies of the
1960s, when hundreds of thousands of infants across the equatorial
belt died from over-diluted formula made with unsterilized water.
(4) "Potentially [that] could happen again," Cheng admits, "which is
why we're treading very carefully. There are just so many variables
you have to consider. You especially have to take a look at the
surroundings to see whether formula feeding is really feasible; it's
not just a question of making it available."
In fact, approximately 52 percent of sub-Saharan Africans have no
access to safe water today and 62 percent have no proper sanitation
-- making formula preparation impossible. Meanwhile, an estimated
50 million preschool children suffer from debilitating protein-
energy malnutrition. (5) WHO has estimated that increasing
breastfeeding in these nations could help to prevent as many as 1.5
million children's deaths every year. (6)
I mention these statistics to Cheng, adding that there seems no
doubt that breastfeeding provides an essential defense against
malnutrition and disease, especially in much of the Third World.
"Definitely," she responds. "Which is why there is such an urgency to
come up with AZT, to really try to reduce the risk of HIV
transmission to babies."
In other words, a drug (AZT), which can actually impair immunity,
will be given to combat a virus (HIV) that has never been proven to
destroy immunity, and then finally, the very source of immunity that
nature has provided (breastmilk) will be discouraged.
Breastmilk -- and this much is not in question -- contains a complex
mix of nutrients specifically tailored for the developing baby. It
contains innumerable vital growth factors, as well as antibodies
that can help to fight off infections. In short, breastmilk simply is
the perfect food for babies. In December 1997, the American
Academy of Pediatrics issued sweeping guidelines stressing
breastmilk as the foundation of proper infant nutrition. (7)
"Increasing both the rate of mothers' breastfeeding initiation and
the duration should be a national health objective," emphasizes Ruth
A. Lawrence, MD, one of the authors of the AAP'S position paper. As
more information about the countless benefits of breastfeeding is
disseminated, the number of mothers who initiate breastfeeding at
birth in the US keeps growing, reaching an all-time high this year of
62.4 percent. (8)
It is highly ironic, therefore, that in AIDS -- a condition of severely
impaired immunity -- women should be advised against breastfeeding.
The rationale, of course, is that nothing impairs the human immune
system like the HIV virus. Leaving aside the substantial question of
whether HIV does, in fact, destroy the immune system, what is the
evidence that it transmits via breastmilk?
"There is no proof that HIV exists in breastmilk. It has not, to my
knowledge, ever been isolated in breastmilk," says Professor Gordon
Stewart, the Emeritus Professor of Public Health at the University
of Glasgow and a former consultant to WHO. "I'm quite sure that
under present circumstances in Third World countries affected by
AIDS, the withdrawal of breastfeeding is a much greater danger to
newborns and infants than is the risk of AIDS." (9)
Stewart adds, "AZT is also more likely to be toxic to a woman when
she is pregnant because many women experience elevated blood
pressure during pregnancy, which then can interfere with kidney
function. Hence, the toxicity [of AZT] rises and, of course, the baby
gets whatever the mother gets."
"There are seldom infectious levels of HIV in semen, much less in
breastmilk," concurs Dr. David Rasnick, a protease developer and
chemist who also doubts many of the claims made about the HIV
virus. He's referring to the relatively unknown fact that in some of
the studies, infectious HIV appeared in the semen of only about 25
percent of HIV-infected men." (10)
"It is impossible to be certain if transmission of AIDS is prenatal, in
utero, postpartum, or via breastmilk," says Naomi Baumslag, MD,
MPH, the author of Money, Milk and Madness. "While there are a very
few reported cases of HIV transmission through breastmilk, it has
not been absolutely proven. Studies may eventually even show that
exclusive breastfeeding is protective against AIDS."
La Leche League (LLL), the 42-year old international breastfeeding-
support organization has tried to combat the new zeal to stop all
HIV-positive women from breastfeeding their young children.
Although LLL's stance is that the transmission of HIV is of concern,
a June press release from the group also urges restraint and caution.
"Some researchers," LLL's recent statement says, "have isolated HIV
in human milk...Yet other studies have not shown there to be a very
high risk of transmission through breastfeeding." (11) The statement
points out, too, that many studies have not differentiated between
viral fragments of HIV and intact HIV virus within the cells in milk;
only the latter type could replicate and therefore be considered
infectious. The press release concludes that some recent research
has shown breastmilk to actually help slow the progression of the
disease in babies who are born positive.
This last action -- breastmilk's possible ability to combat HIV --
obviously requires more study but it is also extraordinarily
intriguing. In some preliminary studies, certain materials in human
milk clearly helped to protect against infection. (12) The most
convincing evidence came in a trial during which substances in
breastmilk inhibited the binding of an HIV protein to its host cell
receptor, an essential first step in HIV infection. (13) In another
study, this one from Zaire, exclusive breastfeeding by HIV-positive
mothers played a significant role in decreasing overall infant
mortality. (14)
So, should HIV-positive women be breastfeeding? "I think ultimately
it may depend on the individual situation," says Marion Banzhaf, who
does health training and consulting for women with HIV. "If a woman
had an undetectable viral load, I could see her wanting to breastfeed.
What is really needed for women who are HIV-positive, " Banzhaf
adds, "is the ability to look at all the information and do her own
risk-benefit analysis."
Until AIDS came along, the battlelines were starkly drawn between
breastfeeding advocates -- including UNICEF and other aid agencies --
and formula manufacturers who aggressively marketed their products
in the Third World. But now the lines are far more muddled, since the
global HIV-prevention community tends to align itself with any
measure currently believed to help combat HIV, including
restrictions on breastfeeding.
"The idea that giving babies formula can solve the problem of AIDS is like
using a Band-Aid against cancer," Baumslag says. "Formula feeding
has terrible consequences for most children. Many more infants
worldwide die of diarrheal dehydration than of AIDS."
Yet for the foreseeable future, the push to reduce breastfeeding and
increase AZT use among all HIV-positive women is likely only to
increase. In part this is because limited medical resources mean
doctors in the Third World rely on notoriously unreliable -- but cheap
-- forms of HIV testing, which can produce huge numbers of false
positives. In one study done at a hospital in Ghana, more than 60
percent of a group who initially tested positive were later found to
be in fact negative. (15)
"There are some very complex, unresolved issues at the center of the
HIV and breastfeeding protocol," warns Mary Lofton, Public Relations
Manager for LLL.
Dr. Baumslag echoes her concern. "So many essential research
questions remain unanswered," she says. "Can HIV be transmitted
through breastfeeding? If so, how often and by what mechanism?
Does maternal malnutrition play a role? What about micronutrient
status, levels of vitamin A, and other nutritional factors? Do infant
characteristics such as prematurity matter? Can breastfeeding
significantly benefit the HIV-positive infant? And does lactation at
all affect the health of the HIV-positive woman?"
Until these and other questions are answered, the rush to judgment
that discourages, even prohibits breastfeeding, could be responsible
for killing more babies than are saved. *
Celia Farber has written on the issues and controversies surrounding
HIV, AZT, and AIDS for more than a decade. She is a regular
contributor to Esquire, Spin, USA Today, and Gear, among other
national publications. She is the mother of one son and resides with
her family in New York City.
Notes:
1. HIV and Infant Feeding. An Interim Statement, UNAIDS. July 1996,
n. 1-3.
2. Position on the Issue of HIV and Infant Feeding, International
Lactation Consultant Association, 1997.
3. UNICEF press release, March 26, 1998.
4. D. B. Jelliffe, and E. F. P. Jelliffe, Human Milk in the Modern World
(Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1978).
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5. C. Geshekter, "A Good Turn for Africa, Please" The Lancet (January
11, 1997): 69.
6. UNICEF, The Progress of Nations, 1997. See Mothering, May-June,
70.
7. "Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk," Pediatrics 100, no. 6
(December 1997).
8 "Breastfeeding Trend Is Upward Bound," La Leche League
International press release, Ross Mothers' Survey, Ross Products
Division, Abbott Laboratories, June 15, 1998.
9. E. Papadopulos-Eleopulos et al., "HIV Antibodies: Further
Questions and a Plea for Clarification," Current Medical Research and
Opinion 13 627-634.
10. Bradley J. Van Voorhis et al., "Detection of Human
Immunodeficiency Type I Virus in Semen from Seropositive Men
Using Culture and Polymerase Chain Reaction Deoxyribonucleic Acid
Amplification Techniques," Fertility and Sterility 56, no. 3 (March
1991) 588-595.
11. Ruth A. Lawrence, MD, Breastfeeding: A Guide for the Medical
Profession (St. Louis, MO: Mosby-Year Book, October 1998).
12. D. S. Newburg and J. M Street, "Bioactive Materials in Human
Milk: Milk Sugars Sweeter the Argument for Breastfeeding," Nutr
Today 32, no. 5: 191-201.
13. D. S. Newburg et al., "Human Milk Glycosaminoglycans Inhibit HIV
Glycoprotein gp120 Binding to Its Host Cell CD4 Receptor," J Nutr
125 419-424.
14. R. W. Ryder et al., "Evidence from Zaire that Breastfeeding by
HIV-1-seropositive Mothers Is Not a Major Route for Perinatal HIV-1
Transmission but Does Decrease Morbidity," AIDS 5, no. 6: 709-714.
15. 0. Hishida et al., "Clinically Diagnosed AIDS Cases Without
Evident Association with HIV Type 1 and 2 Infection in Ghana," The
Lancet 340 (1992): 971-972.