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  • Growing collective knowledge in lactation medicine: the vital role of dissent; integration across multiple domains; and the destructive power of exclusion
  • The politics of exclusion and extraction: a call for change in the field of lactation medicine so that breastfeeding families receive the best possible science-based support
  • The world's leading breastfeeding non-profits exclude groundbreaking research and innovative science-based education initiatives for ideological and commercial reasons
  • Ideology 'cancels' intellectual debate and science-based innovation in the fields of breastfeeding medicine and lactation consultancy
  • The International Board of Lactation Consultant Examiners pulls commercial levers to 'cancel' the Possums (or NDC) programs' genuinely research-based lactation education

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  • S18: Evolutionary and sociocultural contexts in which women breastfeed
  • CH 4: Ideology and the politics of exclusion and extraction: weaponising the WHO Code

Growing collective knowledge in lactation medicine: the vital role of dissent; integration across multiple domains; and the destructive power of exclusion

Dr Pamela Douglas14th of Feb 202615th of Feb 2026

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The genius of Homo sapiens' collective intelligence

Over the past 300,000 years, our species Homo sapiens has flourished in a way that is unparalled by any other species, migrating across vast seas and land bridges and surviving at least two Ice Ages, to inhabit almost all of the land masses on the surface of the planet. We have been able to do this because of a unique human characteristic - our genius for the invention of technologies and the stunning and intergenerational accumulation of collective intelligence, millenium after millenium.

Although this is not entirely linear, with complex networks of knowledge and culture rising and falling, over all we humans belong in our bodies and our brains to a time-developmental universe (by that I mean, an evolving universe), driven into ever-greater complexity and technological mastery by our insatiable and innate Homo sapiens curiosity to innovate, experiment, explore.

With the advent of writing, which burst forth over the past 5,000 years in various independent locations, our capacity to store knowledge, share it, and pass it down the generations began to explode. Artificial intelligence is, some evolutionary biologists argue, an inevitable outcome of Homo sapiens' breathtaking capacity to build knowledge collectively.

The genius of Homo sapiens' collective intelligence in provision of healthcare

The collective building of knowledge in our contemporary healthcare systems is, needless to say, a brilliant collective gift which dramatically protects and extends human lives (if still shockingly inequitably applied around the planet). Today, the collective building of knowledge in health occurs through painstakingly developed systems of research and through consensus development of clinical guidelines. This system remains flawed, vulnerable to power dynamics and increasingly co-opted by commercial interests, but is nevertheless fundamental for systematising the ways in which we act together with our collective intelligence to protect the life and health of our fellow humans. The health systems of advanced economies illustrate the Homo sapiens genius, and our extraordinary commitment to caring for each other.

There is an inherent conservatism to collective intelligence in health, which is an important protective mechanism. Yet because of our nature as evolutionary beings, this conservatism must be (according to the laws of evolution) constantly challenged by new perspectives, new interpretations, new models arising up outside the agreed consensus. This is how our collective genius continues to evolve for the betterment of the health of humankind (and also for the protection of the Earth). Optimising health outcomes is an increasingly urgent project as we face global health crises such as unsustainable health system costs, increasing overmedicalisation and overtreatment, market-driven co-optation of health system priorities, the health impacts of climate-driven extreme weather events, and war.

It's essential to welcome dissent and debate if we are to optimally support breastfeeding and lactation

Welcoming in debate, discussion, and dissent is absolutely vital if we humans of the 21st century are to continue to evolve the best possible care for breastfeeding women, their infants, and their families after centuries, perhaps millenia, of a patriarchal and colonising devaluing and neglect. Disrupted trajectories during the highly plastic first weeks and months of life can result in disproportionately amplified and costly health impacts in later life.

The world's dominant breastfeeding non-profits, established in the USA in the 1980s, when I was a young doctor - have played a vital role in raising the awareness of the importance of breastfeeding for optimal health outcomes. These non-profit corporations emerged out of a period when Scientific Motherhood and a demeaning of lactation dominated the Industrial Scientific mindsets of the West. I remember how proud I was to qualify as one of the early adopter GP-IBCLCs in 1994. But three decades later, I see how the world's breastfeeding non-profits - now large US-dominated monopolies - actively hold back the advance of lactation medicine by excluding dissent and research, for ideological reasons. This is not science-based, nor aligned with our formidable human powers of intellectual and clinical evolution, and therefore has serious negative impact upon the wellbeing of breastfeeding families. In is not surprising that in this context, with researchers and researcher-clinicians banished along with their potential to act as a collective intellectual brake, resource-greedy overmedicalisation, paramedicalisation, and overtreatments now flourish in the care of mothers and babies.

The title Lactation Medicine excludes

I remember when my medical IBCLC colleagues in Australia, back in the 2000s, didn't consider my work to belong in breastfeeding & lactation medicine. I think this was because I spoke about how the best way to improve breastfeeding rates was to change our clinical response to unsettled infant behaviour, proposing a multi-domain approach. Now, I see that Lactation Medicine as a subspecialty claims to have special expertise in unsettled infant behaviour and also the other domains of early life care!

However, the name Lactation Medicine, split off by virtue of its title from the domains of infant behaviour and development and perinatal mental health (though nevertheless forcefully claiming these as within its specific specialised expertise) inevitably fails to deeply engage whole fields of research, innovation, and clinical advance - because researchers and educators in these fields do not wish to be a part of a field which excludes some families according to mode of infant feeding.

In affluent societies, 21st century infants survive and thrive without breastfeeding (given our genius for developing and refining technologies like commercial milk formula). Infants cannot survive let alone thrive without sensory motor nourishment. They cannot survive without sleep. I worry that there is a reactionary hubris in the steps currently being taken to elevate the field of Lactation Medicine, which continues to be predominantly US-centric, once we consider the complexity of the biological system of a mother and baby - nested within family and society - from a genuinely integrative and holistic point of view.

Unfortunately, the breastfeeding non-profit corporations' ideologically normalised practice of exclusion, targeting both individuals and organisations, is intentionally designed to harm those who are excluded and is therefore inconsistent with the principles of collegiate commitment to the wellbeing of other health professionals (a value which is increasingly explicit and nurtured within other subspecialties in medicine).

But by excluding formula-feeding families from its name, Breastfeeding and Lactation Medicine - most destructively of all - excludes those many families and infants who are not exclusively breastfeeding, or who are unable to breastfeed at all.

Neuroprotective Developmental Care offers an inclusive and integrative path forward to best possible support of breastfeeding and lactation

My vision for NDC offers an alternative path forward. It seems to me that by the time my great-grandchildren are giving birth to babies (should they choose to do so), there won't be a separate subspecialty within medicine called Lactation Medicine. Lactation Medicine will be subsumed, in this vision, as part of a subspecialty which provides Neuroprotective Developmental Care (or something similarly named), providing specialised training across the multiple infant care domains for those who care clinically for families with infants. In my vision, this specialised field will offer the highest possible levels of clinical competence, built from research by implementation science, in what is (from an evolutionary perspective) the foundational domain of breastfeeding and lactation, since it interacts with each other infant care domain.

But an overarching title of 'Lactation Medicine' will be avoided, because it excludes.

There's ample research to show us that this kind of societal exclusion ends up causing psychological harm to women, no matter how fiercely those leading the fields of lactation medicine and clinical lactation support protest that they are inclusive. And the exclusion of dozens of colleagues around the world, who are as passionate about contributing to the advancement of breastfeeding and lactation as those Board and committee members of the breastfeeding non-profits who exclude them, is intended to inflict personal collegiate harm. There's no evidence to suggest that ideologically motivated exclusion of colleagues improves the wellbeing of breastfeeding families, and every reason to think it is currently holding back innovation and advance. This is not faceless, nor is it accidental - most often, the excluded colleagues are quite well known to the excluders.

I look forward to a future where all health professionals who care for breastfeeding mothers, babies and their families live by the wisdom of scientist Robin Wall Kimmerer, who reminds us: All flourishing is mutual.

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Reference

Kimmerer, Robin Wall. The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World 2024

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Next up in Ideology and the politics of exclusion and extraction: weaponising the WHO Code

The politics of exclusion and extraction: a call for change in the field of lactation medicine so that breastfeeding families receive the best possible science-based support

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Our guiding star: the shared value of wanting the best possible care for breastfeeding women and their babies

"We have to invent new wisdom for a new age. And in the meantime we must, if we are to do any good, appear unorthodox, troublesome, dangerous, disobedient." John Maynard Keynes

The advanced content of Possums Breastfeeding & Lactation (PBL) is available for you to work your way through, for your own purposes. It is also the content upon which the NDC Lactation Fellowship builds, should you be a registered health professional in your own country, and interested in particpating in an online community of registered health professionals to become an NDC Lactation Fellow.

Before all else, Neuroprotective Developmental…

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Possums acknowledges the traditional owners of the lands upon which The Possums Programs have been created, the Yuggera and Turrbal Peoples. We acknowledge that First Nations have breastfed, slept with, and lovingly raised their children on Australian lands for at least 65,000 years, to become the oldest continuous living culture on Earth. Possums stands with the Uluru Statement from the Heart.