Health
World Breastfeeding Week: UNICEF Engages Media on Field Mission
From Mike Tayese, Yenagoa
As the World mark the 2025 World Breastfeeding Week championed by World Health Organisation (WHO), United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and other partners, the Bayelsa government through the Ministry of Health last Wednesday kickoff the activities with sensitization on the importance of breastfeeding to mother and child at the Yenizue-Epie Primary Health Care Center at the heart of the state capital witnessed by who is who in the health sector, nursing mothers and expectant mothers.

During the field mission on Sunday at various churches in Yenagoa the state capital monitored by our Correspondent sponsored by UNICEF, the team visited Mount of Eternal House of Prayer Cathedral GRA Otiotio, DOC&S Church, Mount of Deliverance Okaka and CCC Palace of Mercy Arietalin Ovom in Yenagoa local government area of the state.
The team were warmly welcomed in the churches visited, addressing members of the various churches, Rose Okparan: Director Nutrition Department Primary HealthCare Board (PHCB) said World Breastfeeding Week is celebrated globally and not only in Bayelsa state every August each year.
She said breastfeeding is very important because it is the foundation of man. Breastfeeding to humans is the foundation of life. “The first breast milk that comes out when a woman delivers newly that is yellowish and creamy is very important because it contains what we called antibodies that fight against sickness and which we also called the first immunization, help the babies fight against any infection and diseases that come across the baby as it is newly born.
“The first milk also contains vitamin A to brighten the child’s eyes and it also contains protein. That yellowish one called colostrum is the richest and that is why we say don’t throw it away. It is the best and richest, it also builds child immunity, exclusive breastfeeding prevents stunted growth. Adding no water before six months is the recommended practice.
“UNICEF, WHO have carried out survey and discovered that a child breastfed for the six months exclusively are more brilliant than those that were not exclusively breastfed, it makes the brains to develop well”, she said
Grace further said, exclusive breastfeeding prevents the mother from ovarian and breast cancer, while it also helps to prevent the child from diabetes in future and several other benefits to the mothers and child.
Also speaking, the state Chairman Person of Women Wing of the Christian Association of Nigeria Bayelsa state Mrs. Grace Iyabi advised women to give their children exclusive breastfeeding for six months.
According to her, some women are afraid that their breasts will sag if they exclusively breastfed their babies, but saying whether they breastfed or not the breast will still sag because it is nature.
“It is a responsibility that God has given to everybody, it is not a choice but a priority. We have to give our children breast milk, especially exclusive breastfeeding for six months without water. Every woman is breastfed with breast milk and when you have issues of breast milk not coming contact nurses and they will tell you what to do and breastfeeding is one of the things you owe your child”.
In an interview with our Correspondent after the sensitization, Snr Apostle Michael Makpa thanked UNICEF and the Ministry of Health for the initiative about talking to churches on exclusive breastfeeding.
He said the lecture was very educational and eye opening, especially when she talked about the first milk and also how to alternate between the two breasts when breastfeeding. “It is eye opening that exclusive breastfeeding creates a lower rate of ovarian and breast cancer which most of our one younger ones should be educated about. And the belief of most of our women saying that when they breastfeed their breast will sag, she has been able to enlighten the people that either way, the breast will still sag. I think that is very very educational to us”.
Also speaking, Mother Christina Olali said, for all her children she breastfed them from zero to six months without water, only the breast milk. I even wondered that people this day within one or two months started giving their children milk instead of breastfeeding them exclusively. “Try and feed your babies with breast milk and for the lecture we heard today, I am very very happy, UNICEF and the government are trying”.
Also in the team is Gwegwe Yimuze, Head of Block DOC&S Church.
Earlier in the week, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Field Office Enugu in collaboration with the Broadcasting Corporation of Abia held a Zoom meeting with the twelve state correspondents on Media Dialogue on Dissemination of Key Messages on the 2025 World Breastfeeding Week.
In her welcome remark, Mrs. Juliet Chiluwe, UNICEF Field Office Enugu said,2 6 out of 36 states in Nigeria have not created an enabling environment in which women can exclusively breastfeed their babies.
Saying Nigerian babies are weaned too early.
She commended 10 states which includes Lagos, Kwara, Ekiti, Oyo, Cross River, Kaduna, Niger, Ondo, Enugu, for six months’ pay maternity leave for women.
In his remark, the General Manager Broadcasting Corporation of Abia Mr. Francis Nwubani said, World Breastfeeding Week is celebrated every year in the first week of August, championed by WHO, UNICEF, Ministries of Health and civil society partners around the globe. Saying It’s a time to recognize breastfeeding as a powerful foundation for lifelong health, development, and equity.
According to him, World Breastfeeding Week shines a particular spotlight on the ongoing support women and babies need from the healthcare system through their breastfeeding journey.”This means ensuring every mother has access to the support and information she needs to breastfeed as long as she wishes to do so by investing in skilled breastfeeding counselling, enforcing the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes, and creating environment at home, in healthcare, and at work—that support and empower women.
“However, breastfeeding can be challenging when parents are not fully supported. Breastfeeding delivers a hopeful future not only for children, but for societies. It reduces healthcare costs, boosts cognitive development, strengthens economies, and sets children up with healthy beginnings.
“As we mark World Breastfeeding Week under the theme, “Prioritise breastfeeding: Create sustainable support systems”, WHO and UNICEF are calling on governments, health administrators, and partners to invest in high-quality breastfeeding support in so many ways especially by ensuring that all health service providers are equipped with the skills and knowledge required to support breastfeeding, including in emergency and humanitarian settings”.
Francis further said, to ensure that adequate information is passed to nursing mothers, caregivers and the general public on the numerous benefits of breastfeeding, UNICEF in collaboration with BCA Umuahia have gathered professionals from both electronic and print media for this media dialogue.
“It is indisputable that all the information about breastfeeding cannot be well disseminated without the media. You play a key role in this agenda of informing the public about breastfeeding”.
Health
FG Opens Sexual Assault Referral Centre in Abia
The Federal Government has inaugurated an additional Sexual Assault Referral Centre (SARC) in Abia to strengthen Nigeria’s protection framework for women and girls.
This was disclosed in a statement signed by Ahmed Danbazau, Head, Press and Public Relations, Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, recently in Abuja.
The Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hajiya Imaan Suleiman-Ibrahim, said that as of November 2025, Nigeria had 50 SARCs across 24 states, collectively assisting 58,134 survivors.
She noted, however, that the number remained insufficient compared to the magnitude of reported and unreported cases nationwide.
Suleiman-Ibrahim said it addresses Gender-Based Violence (GBV), which remains pervasive, underreported and increasingly complex in both physical and digital forms.
“Today marks a major step in strengthening the protection architecture for women and girls in Nigeria,” she said.
According to the minister, the SARC provides a safe, confidential and integrated platform for medical care, psychosocial support, legal referral and justice services for survivors.
She said the centre represents a structured and survivor-centred response embedded within the national social development framework.
“A functional SARC ensures that survivors receive confidential, survivor-centred and integrated services under one coordinated framework,” she added, noting that fragmented responses often compound trauma and weaken justice outcomes.
The minister highlighted the rising threat of technology-facilitated GBV, including cyberstalking, digital coercion, online trafficking, image-based abuse and coordinated digital harassment.
“These emerging threats demand stronger institutional response systems that combine legal, psychosocial, medical and digital protection mechanisms,” she said.
Suleiman-Ibrahim commended complementary initiatives, such as the Osusu Abaala Women Palm-Oil Collective, aimed at strengthening women’s incomes and reducing economic vulnerability; a root driver of GBV.
“When women are economically secure, socially organised and institutionally supported, their exposure to exploitation, abuse and dependency significantly declines,” she said.
The minister emphasised the ministry’s commitment to strengthening the national GBV response architecture through policy reforms, survivor support systems, data-driven coordination, and strategic partnerships under the Renewed Hope Social Development Agenda.
She commended President Bola Tinubu for declaring 2026 as the Year for Social Development and Families, calling it a bold step to reposition protection services as a core pillar of national stability, human capital development and social justice.
Suleiman-Ibrahim also appreciated the Government and people of Abia for providing an enabling environment for the centre’s establishment, noting that strong sub-national leadership is critical to building safe communities.
“To our development partners, service providers and frontline responders, your commitment to survivor care, justice and rehabilitation continues to strengthen Nigeria’s social protection system,” she said.
She stressed that silence, stigma and impunity must no longer define the experience of survivors, adding: “Access to justice, care and protection must become the national standard.”
The minister expressed confidence that the new SARC would operate with professionalism, confidentiality, accountability and compassion.
“It must serve as a safe space for healing, a gateway to justice and a model for replication across other states of the federation,” she said.
Health
Report Every Vaccine Reactions to Clinic, Pediatrician Urges Parents
A Consultant Pediatrician, Dr. Folusho Balogun has stressed the need for parents to always report any vaccine reactions experienced by their children, to the immunisation clinic.
Balogun, Consultant Paediatrician, Institute of Child Health, University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, made the remark on Friday in an interview in Ibadan.
Balogun, also the Oyo State Team Lead of the International Paediatrics Association and Paediatric Association of Nigeria Immunisation champions, said the reports should be used to improve vaccination programmes.
Balogun was speaking on how to manage vaccines reactions in children.
She urged clinics to encourage clients’ report of Adverse Events Following Immunisation (AEFI), do proper documentation and forward the records to the right quarters.
The paediatrician emphasised that the data should be stored and processed appropriately to inform policy and practice.
She added that the AEFI investigation committee should be visible to the public and active at local government, state and national levels.
According to her, it’s the Pentavalent vaccine(the pertussis component) taken at 6,10 and 14 weeks that infants react to most.
“It causes fever and irritability which usually subside within 12 to 24 hours; parents are advised to give the infants paracetamol to control the reactions”.
Balogun cautioned that babies of HIV positive mothers needed to be assessed by health workers to determine their fitness to take some vaccines such as BCG.
She said the HIV exposed infant should be evaluated before the commencement of Immunisation.
“Common vaccine reactions are pain at the injection site, swelling which sometimes forms pus, redness especially in light skinned children and sometimes convulsion.
“Parents are usually informed about the likely side effects before vaccine administration and they are told what to do.
“For fever and pain, paracetamol is given, for swellings, cold compress like ice pack is used.
“For convulsion, the child should be laid on the left side till it subsides because most cases last for a few minutes; then the child should be brought back to the clinic for evaluation,” she said.
Balogun stresses that younger children, especially infants, were more likely to react to vaccines than older ones.
She added that the older the child, the less likely the chance of a reaction.
Health
UNICEF Records 14m Nigeria Birth Registrations in Two Years
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said 14 million Nigerian children have had their births officially registered in the past two years, marking significant progress in legal identity coverage.
UNICEF Country Representative, Wafaa Abdelatef, disclosed this on Friday during a courtesy visit to the First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu, at the State House, Abuja.
Abdelatef described birth registration as a fundamental right of every child, noting that the scale of progress recorded in Nigeria within a short period was remarkable compared to other countries where she had served.
“Birth registration is the first right of every child; to be counted and recognised.
In just two years, we have registered 14 million children, which is truly impressive,” she said.She added that the registration system was being digitised across health facilities to improve efficiency, while supportive legislation was being considered by the National Assembly to strengthen the process.
According to her, sustained leadership and collaboration have helped accelerate the scale-up, ensuring that more children gain access to identity, protection and essential services.
Responding, the First Lady acknowledged UNICEF’s longstanding support to Nigeria, emphasising that birth registration must continue until every Nigerian child is captured.
“Every child has the right to be counted. Legal identity enables access to health services and social protection and supports national planning,” she said.
Tinubu noted that strengthening birth registration would also help the government generate reliable population data, especially in the absence of a recent census, and guide provision of services for children.
She, however, expressed concern over persistent health challenges, including tuberculosis, HIV and AIDS, and maternal and child mortality, describing them as areas requiring intensified interventions.
“Nigeria has a large population, and these indicators remain high and worrisome, but we are not relenting. Efforts are ongoing to reposition the country for a healthier future,” she said.
The First Lady reaffirmed her commitment to continued collaboration with UNICEF to advance child welfare and national development priorities.


