Breast May Be Best, But Pumps Get All the Attention

Companies praised for allowing women to pump ... but contact has no substitute
Posted Jan 12, 2009 3:54 PM CST
Breast May Be Best, But Pumps Get All the Attention
Jessica Salazar holds twins Matias, left, and Josue, as they take part in a breastfeeding contest in Lima, Peru, Aug. 26, 2008.   (AP Photo)

The push for regulations that give US moms a place and time to pump their breast milk overlooks a major part of the age-old breast-feeding debate, Jill Lepore writes in the New Yorker. “Is it the mother, or her milk, that matters more to the baby?” Lepore asks. High-tech pumps and office “lactation rooms” promote a woman’s right to work more than anything else, she argues.

If encouraging breast-feeding is the goal, we should address the real obstacles: limited maternity leave and few workplace day-care centers. “Something you plug into a wall socket is a far cry from a whisper and a kiss,” Lepore writes. Regardless, the tide is likely to turn again: Breast-feeding has come in and out of fashion for centuries. (More breast feeding stories.)

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