Abstract
BACKGROUND: Breastfeeding confers substantial health benefits for infants and mothers, yet global exclusive breastfeeding rates remain far below recommended levels. Although extensive epidemiologic evidence documents the risks associated with formula feeding, breastfeeding promotion remains an outlier within public health communication: unlike campaigns addressing smoking, vaccination, or screening, it relies predominantly on gain-framed messages emphasizing benefits rather than on transparent discussion of risks. This Debate examines how behavioral science, especially research on loss aversion and message framing, can inform breastfeeding promotion, and why risk-based communication has been uniquely constrained in this domain. MAIN TEXT: RISK COMMUNICATION, GUILT, AND COMMERCIAL INFLUENCE: Concerns about inducing maternal guilt have shaped breastfeeding promotion for more than two decades, contributing to unusually cautious, euphemistic public messaging that downplays the risks associated with formula feeding. Qualitative research shows that mothers often experience guilt not from accurate risk information but from the moralization of infant feeding and from structural barriers such as inadequate paid leave, limited lactation support, and lack of access to safe donor milk that make exclusive breastfeeding difficult to achieve. Behavioral science further suggests that parents may be especially sensitive to loss-framed information because feeding decisions affect the infant rather than the self, and that cultural context shapes how framing works. At the same time, commercial formula marketing strategically leverages maternal emotion, reframes breastfeeding advocacy as divisive or judgmental, and promotes formula as a “guilt-free” alternative. This dynamic has contributed to a policy environment in which transparent risk communication is often perceived as harmful when formula marketing exerts profound and targeted influence on parental decision-making. CONCLUSION: Silencing risk communication because of fear of maternal guilt is neither evidence-based nor ethically justified. Breastfeeding promotion at the population level must be able to communicate risks transparently (including loss-framed information where appropriate and evidence-based) while pairing this with strong structural supports, protection from commercial influence, rigorous message testing, and compassionate, individualized clinical care. Advancing an evidence-based, emotionally intelligent, and context-sensitive approach to risk communication is essential for ensuring that breastfeeding promotion is both effective and equitable. CLINICAL TRIAL NUMBER: Not applicable.