Connect with us

Health

UNICEF advocates for six months paid maternity leave for working nursing mothers

Published

on

From Paul Orude Bauchi

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has advocated for six months paid maternity leave for working nursing mother as part of efforts to improve workplace policies to boost breastfeeding.
The call was contained in a goodwill message by Dr. Tushar Rane, Chief of Field Office, UNICEF Nigeria Bauchi Field Office, during a Media Dialogue, held at Jamil Hotel and Towers, Azare, Katagum Local Government Area of Bauchi State, on Wednesday.

The Media Dialogue, organised by UNICEF, is part of efforts to commemorate the annual World Breastfeeding Week (WBW), and drew participants from the UNICEF) Bauchi Field Office in Adamawa, Bauchi, Gombe, Plateau and Taraba States.
Rane argued that family-friendly workplace policies – such as paid maternity leave, breastfeeding breaks, and a room where mothers can breastfeed – can also have huge benefits for employerss
“These approaches generate economic returns by reducing maternity-related absenteeism, increasing the retention of female workers, and reducing the costs of hiring and training new staff,” he said
“Nigeria currently implements two maternity entitlement provisions.
“The first, which is recognised at all levels of public service and codified in the Nigerian Labour Act, provides up to 12 weeks of maternity leave with at least 50% of salary and, upon return to work, half an hour twice a day during working hours to breastfeed.
“The second, recently adopted by the Federal Public Service and yet to be ratified by the states and local government civil service, is a 16-week maternity leave provision with full pay and two hours off each day to breastfeed up to six months after the employee resumes duty”
The UNICEF Chief of Field Office said workplaces challenges to breastfeeding were one of the primary factors responsible for early cessation of breastfeeding.
“Women require sufficient time and support to breastfeed successfully,” he said.
“For working mothers, juggling between tasks and breastfeeding may be nearly often impossible”
Speaking specifically on this year’s theme ” Enabling Breastfeeding: Making a difference for working parents”, Rane it brings attention to workplace breastfeeding.
“Women make up 20 million out of the 46 million workforce in Nigeria,” he noated.
“95 per cent are within the informal sector, while the formal sector only employs 5 per cent.
“Shockingly, only 9 per cent of organizations have a workplace breastfeeding policy, with only 1.5 per cent in the public sector.
“Women in the informal sector have nearly no support for breastfeeding”
He said that breast milk is the first vaccine that every child received at birth, adding that breast milk has the ability to safeguard infants against life-threatening infections.
He said breastfeeding also supports optimal brain development in children, and reduces the incidence of chronic childhood and maternal illnesses and ultimately lowering healthcare costs.
Also speaking, a member of the Bauchi State House of Assembly, Honourable Lawal Dauda, disclosed that the House would enact a law to increase maternity leave from three months six months for breastfeeding mothers to promote breastfeeding and boost child survival.
In his welcome address during the Media Dialogue, the Executive Director of the State Primary Healthcare Development Agency, Dr Rilwanu Mohammed disclosed that as part of efforts to enact the law, advocacies would be carried out to public institutions, MDAs, traditional rulers.
Mohammed said the executive arm of the state government is expected to submit a proposal to the state Assembly to extend the maternity leave.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

News2 days ago

Arewa Youth Group Urges Tinubu to Prevent Leadership Vacuum in Nigeria Customs Service

From.Paul Orude Bauchi  The Arewa Youths Advocate for Good Governance (AYAGG) has called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to take...

News2 days ago

College of Education, Kangere Mourns Former Bauchi Deputy Governor

Umar Usman Duguri The Provost of the College of Education, Kangere,Dr Dauda Buteh. on behalf of the Governing Council, management,...

News3 days ago

Katagum Youth Group Urges Tinubu, APC Leadership to Review Bauchi Guber Candidature

From Paul Orude Bauchi The Katagum Youth Progressive Group (KYPG) has appealed to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the National...

News3 days ago

APC Youth Group Berates Maidoki For Defecting From APC

Our Editor A political group in Kebbi State, the Kebbi APC Youth Vanguard (KAYVA) has dismissed as unconvincing the reasons...

News4 days ago

APM Guber Candidate Donates N21 Million to Bara Flood Victims, Shira Windstorm Victims

From Paul Orude, Bauchi The governorship candidate of the Allied Peoples Movement (APM) in Bauchi State, Dr. Yakubu Adamu, has...

News6 days ago

CITAD Trains 37 Participants on Digital Inclusion in Bauchi

From Paul Orude Bauchi The Centre for Information Technology and Development (CITAD), through its Bauchi Feminist Internet School (BAFIS) 2026,...

News7 days ago

Birshi-Miri Residents Rally Support for Bauchi APC Governorship Candidate, M.A. Abubakar

From Paul Orude Bauchi The ambition of the All Progressives Congress (APC) gubernatorial candidate in Bauchi State, Mohammed Abdullahi Abubakar,...

News1 week ago

Bauchi Governor Commissions 2,176 Forest Guards to Strengthen Security

From.Paul.Orude Bauchi  The Bauchi State Governor, Senator Bala Mohammed has commissioned 2,176 trained vigilantes and forest security personnel to enhance...

News1 week ago

Insecurity: FG Security Agency intensifies partnerships, visits Maiduguri

Our Editor The National Centre for the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons (NCCSALW), under the Office of the...

News1 month ago

Lau Residents, Workers Hail Council Boss Over Vehicle Donation To Vice Chair

By Andrew Ojih,  Jalingo.  Workers and Residents of Lau LGA of Taraba state on Tuesday hailed the Council Chairman of...

Trending

Exit mobile version