lunes, 17 de octubre de 2016

Listening test: Breastfeeding expert defends nursing two-year-olds

Listen to this radio news item on breastfeeding and choose the option A, B or C which best completes each sentence. 0 is an example.

source: Radio Sweden

0 Example:
The child
A is five years old.
B is two years old.
C was never breastfed.

1 The mother was accused of
A abusing breastfeeding.
B abusing her daughter.
C not paying enough attention to her daughter’s health.

2 According to expert Sofia Zwedberg,
A breastmilk doesn’t contain all nutrients that a child needs.
B babies should be exclusively fed with breastmilk until six months old.
C babies should always receive additional iron and vitamin C while being breastfed.

3 The problem with the child is
A she has shown signs of malnourishment.
B she’s small for her age.
C she wasn’t breastfed as a baby.

4 In Zwedberg’s opinion
A breastfeeding being bad for older children is a myth.
B breastfeeding sometimes leads to maltreatment.
C mothers can force a child to breastfeed.

5 The mother
A admits being careless with her daughter’s health.
B has been reported to social services.
C has had mental problems as a result of the controversy.

6 The mother
A has admitted that her child is often ill.
B says the importance of breastfeeding goes beyond food.
C was given advice on how to feed her daughter.

7 Expert Sofia Zwedberg says
A a hundred years ago children were breastfed until the age of 5.
B children enjoy breastfeeding.
C the breastfeeding experience is similar in all mothers.


A Swedish mother faced being reported to social services for breastfeeding her two-year-old, but one expert says children should ideally be breastfed up to age five.
Earlier this year, the mother was told by a nurse at a child health care centre in Luleå, in northern Sweden that her daughter was not growing fast enough and that unless the she stopped breastfeeding her, she would be reported to social services. The mother was told that breastfeeding her two-year-old was tantamount to child abuse and that it was hampering the child’s growth, local newspaper Norrländska Socialdemokraten reported earlier this month.
But other breastfeeding experts disagree. Speaking to Swedish Radio, Sofia Zwedberg, a midwife and a breastfeeding researcher at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, said she would prefer to see more mothers breastfeeding their two-year-olds.
Zwedberg said breastmilk contains all nutrients that a child needs and that the global recommendation is for mothers to breastfeed exclusively for six months and then to combine breastfeeding with other feeding for two years or more to ensure the child receives enough iron and vitamin C.
According to the mother in northern Sweden, at two months her child was small and below the growth chart that shows the standard ranges for height and weight. Her daughter had apparently been fully breastfed for six months and after that partially breastfed, but she wasn’t eating enough food. But the mother said that the girl showed no signs of malnourishment, nutrient shortage or iron deficiency.
Zwedberg, breastfeeding expert at Karolinska Institute, told Swedish Radio that the idea that it is terrible to breastfeed older children is a “social construct”. Zwedberg said a mother can never force a child to breastfeed and so it is not a question of maltreatment.
And speaking to the newspaper Dagens Nyheter, the mother in Northern Sweden said she was distressed after being told that she needed to stop breastfeeding completely or risk being reported to social services. She said “I had a breakdown. Would I, who had always done what I thought was best for my child, be reported for child abuse?”
The mother herself reported the child health care centre in Lulea to the Health and Social Care Inspectorate, stating that she did not receive any other advice apart from the order to stop breastfeeding. She told Dagens Nyheter that for her and her child, breastfeeding “was about much more than just food”. She said it was a way for my daughter to fall asleep, to feel closeness or just to cuddle in the morning.” And she added “breastfeeding was also a saviour when she was ill and had a fever and neither ate nor drank”.
Sofia Zwedberg, at the Karolinska Institute, said women have different experiences breastfeeding and that each case has to be treated individually. However, she said that “biologically speaking, we are meant to breastfeed up to age five but, she insisted, our lifestyles mean that women today choose to stop breastfeeding early.” “If it were up to the children,” said Zwedberg, “we might see more older kids breastfeeding.”

KEY:
1A 2B 3B 4A 5C 6B 7B