Health & Fitness

Breastfeeding Report Card: Where Georgia Ranks in State-By-State Comparison

State lags behind in the number of mothers who try breastfeeding, according to latest CDC Breastfeeding Report Card.

More moms in Georgia decide against breastfeeding than in most any other state, according to a new study released this week by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. And many of those who start breastfeeding stop before it is recommended, partly due to a lack of support, according to the CDC's annual Breastfeeding Report Card.

Delaying formula or other foods helps with a child's growth and development, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. Breastfeeding also can prevent sickness and other health problems, like asthma, according to the U.S. Surgeon General's Office.

The CDC's annual survey of breastfeeding rates in each state is released in August because it is National Breastfeeding Month.

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The U.S. average is 81.1 percent of mothers breastfeeding at least once. Georgia is at 69.2 percent and ranked No. 44 in the nation.

The survey results show progress across the country. But, at six months, nearly half of all mothers surveyed had stopped breastfeeding altogether. And only 22.3 percent were exclusively breastfeeding at six months, as recommended.

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Of mothers surveyed in Georgia:

  • 69.2 percent are breastfeeding at least once
  • 48.9 percent are breastfeeding at six months
  • 25.4 percent are breastfeeding exclusively at six months
  • 29.8 percent are breastfeeding at 12 months

The number of Georgia mothers trying to nurse is up only slightly compared to 2007 results. But, the state has seen progress in mothers continuing to breastfeed at six months (38 percent nine years ago) and breastfeeding at 12 months (just 11 percent).


More: The Best and Worst States for Breastfeeding Moms


The CDC hopes the state-by-state Breastfeeding Report Card will encourage all involved in the child's first year to encourage mothers to breastfeed — including politicians. The report goes beyond breastfeeding rates and looked at barriers to continued nursing.

In some instances, it begins with a lack of information and support provided to the mothers and families at the hospital, according to the CDC. Other cases involve a lack of space, equipment or accommodations to properly breastfeed and pump breast milk once mom has returned home or is back at work.

“Mothers can better achieve their breastfeeding goals with active support from their families, friends, communities, clinicians, health care leaders, employers, and policymakers," said Dr. Ruth Petersen, director of the CDC’s Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity.

The CDC helps educate hospital staff through the "Best Fed Beginnings" program and has online resources to help individuals and entire industries support breastfeeding mothers. For its part, the U.S. Office on Women's Health offers employer solutions and "The Business Case for Breastfeeding."

Four female pilots with Frontier Airlines filed a lawsuit earlier this year. They claimed that, among other harmful policies, they weren't given accommodations for breastfeeding and pumping milk.

Public accommodations for breastfeeding often draw opinions and occasionally nasty comments from those people around nursing mothers.

Target supports breastfeeding in any area of the store, but a man lashed out at a nursing shopper in Torrington, Connecticut, in June. The mother recorded the man's rant and posted it on Facebook, noting that other shoppers and staff eventually intervened to protect her.

Several mothers staged a "nurse-in" at a Limerick, Pennsylvania, YMCA in May. The event was in solidarity with a mother who was told by staff to relocate while nursing her child, reportedly because she was making "men in the room uncomfortable."

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