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Breastfeeding promotion. Breastfeeding Mother Horari Brochure Spain 1998

Breastfeeding and timetable: El pit no te horari (The breast has no timetable). Associacio Catalana Pro Alletament Matern (ACPAM), Barcelona.

Dimensions: 210 x 295 mm

MaterialPaper
ContinentEurope
CountrySpain
Year1998

The pit has no timetableThe WHO-UNICEF Joint Statement on Successful Breastfeeding, an information leaflet for the health professional, recalls the ten steps for successful breastfeeding from the WHO-UNICEF Joint Statement on Successful Breastfeeding and the WHO-UNICEF Joint Statement on Successful Breastfeeding.UNICEF 1989.
Brochure in Catalan, pioneering in refuting the erroneous routine of the rigid timetable, every three hoursThe concept of breastfeeding, introduced at the beginning of the 20th century and strongly rooted in health and society.
The Associacio Catalana Pro Alletament Matern (ACPAM, Catalan Association for Breastfeeding) was founded in the early 1990s by Dr. Carlos González, a paediatrician who has been a pioneer in Spain in the dissemination of knowledge about breastfeeding and its defence and promotion. He has organised dozens of breastfeeding courses for health professionals, given numerous lectures and presentations at conferences, translated Dr. Ruth Lawrence's book "Lactancia materna, guia para profesionales" and has written books such as "Bésame mucho", "Mi niño no me come" and "Manual práctico de lactancia materna". It is not possible to write a history of breastfeeding promotion in Spain without mentioning him.

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The pit has no timetableThe WHO-UNICEF Joint Statement on Successful Breastfeeding, an information leaflet for the health professional, recalls the ten steps for successful breastfeeding from the WHO-UNICEF Joint Statement on Successful Breastfeeding and the WHO-UNICEF Joint Statement on Successful Breastfeeding.UNICEF 1989.
Brochure in Catalan, pioneering in refuting the erroneous routine of the rigid timetable, every three hoursThe concept of breastfeeding, introduced at the beginning of the 20th century and strongly rooted in health and society.
The Associacio Catalana Pro Alletament Matern (ACPAM, Catalan Association for Breastfeeding) was founded in the early 1990s by Dr. Carlos González, a paediatrician who has been a pioneer in Spain in the dissemination of knowledge about breastfeeding and its defence and promotion. He has organised dozens of breastfeeding courses for health professionals, given numerous lectures and presentations at conferences, translated Dr. Ruth Lawrence's book "Lactancia materna, guia para profesionales" and has written books such as "Bésame mucho", "Mi niño no me come" and "Manual práctico de lactancia materna". It is not possible to write a history of breastfeeding promotion in Spain without mentioning him.