When Krystal Swift was told by her provider that once her daughter turned 13 months old she would not be allowed to receive breast milk while at daycare, an amazing story of determination ensued.
Krystal's husband is active duty Military and currently deployed, so while Krystal works part-time, her daughter attends a Military daycare facility. Amazingly, while human milk was apparently "not allowed," the centre told the Californian mum that they would accept cow's milk, goat's milk or soy milk instead, but not human milk.
Krystal told me:
"Of course, I asked why and expressed to them that we (my daughter, our pediatrician, our lactation consultant and myself) were not ready to stop. Breast milk provides too many positive benefits...So I started making calls to other local Military Child Development Centres in the area and found one other facility that was allowing a child to receive breast milk after 13 months. That center's Director guided me in the right direction to get the answers I was looking for. After countless emails and phone calls with the USDA and the Food and Health Administration contacts for the Military CDCs, I got a copy of the documents with the facts and they stated, "A parent IS allowed to continue supplying breast milk for their child, for as long as they want."
So why the utter disconnect between the facts and the (mis)interpretation of the policies in play?
To me, Krystal's story is the perfect embodiment of our society's lack of understanding about lactation. The fact that we live in a culture that assumes the milk of another species is somehow healthier for our children than our own, truly boggles my brain. The fact that as a society, we have a seemingly endless thirst for the milk of a cow, yet a distaste for the very thought of a baby drinking the milk of its mother... well, it tells me there is still work to be done in normalising the normal.
Human babies drinking human milk is normal.
And I'm not the only one who thinks so. Every single medical organisation in the world supports breastfeeding...with no caveat. Because, quite simply, the facts support human lactation... if only opinions were formed around facts.
After Krystal received confirmation that the official daycare policy states that breast milk is in fact allowed after 13 months, she was able to ensure that her own daughter continued to receive breast milk after turning 13 months old. More than this, Krystal also requested that all CDC Directors become familiar with the policy, so that when other families choose to continue to provide breast milk after 13 months, they are not challenged.