Home / News / Viral & Trending Breastfeeding athletes can now bring babies to the Olympics after moms speak out Brad Smith/ISI Photos/Getty Images Initially, COVID restrictions wouldn't allow nursing athletes to bring their babies to the games. By Cassandra Stone June 30, 2021 Brad Smith/ISI Photos/Getty Images Rectangle Organizers for the Tokyo Olympics will now permit athletes who are also nursing moms to bring their babies with them to the Summer Games next month, according to a spokesperson for the IOC. This stance is a reverse on an earlier decision that prohibited family members of athletes from attending the games due to COVID-19 safety protocols. A few athletes who are also nursing moms were vocal about having to choose between the Olympic games and their babies and young kids—and now that restriction has been eased. “We are very pleased to hear that the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee has found a special solution regarding the entry to Japan for mothers who are breastfeeding and their young children,” the IOC spokesperson said. When the family member restrictions were first announced, Aliphine Tuliamuk, who qualified for the Games last year and decided to have a baby once the Olympics were postponed, asked the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee if her 5-month-old daughter and fiancé can accompany her to Japan. Canadian basketball player Kim Gaucher, who gave birth in March, and American soccer star Alex Morgan, who has a one-year-old daughter, have both said they’d hoped to bring their babies along to the Games this year. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Alex Morgan (@alexmorgan13) “It’s important to allow mothers the option to have their kids with them when they compete,” Morgan said in April. “If a child is under 1 or 2, they might still be breastfeeding, so that’s a huge piece of it.” Track and field star Allyson Felix told reporters that she didn’t know whether she’d be able to bring her 2-year-old daughter, Camryn, to Tokyo after the restrictions were initially put in place, but she also said that the priority for kids attending should be infants. “I would be most sensitive to moms who are breastfeeding,” she said. “I know for me, when I competed when [Camryn] was under a year old — you need to be near your child.” In an Instagram post shared on Sunday, before the easing of restrictions had been announced, Tuliamuk said she was agonizing over leaving her baby. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Aliphine Chepkerker Tuliamuk (@aliphine) “I had been putting off thinking about Zoe not coming to Tokyo with me for a while now, but I had to start to, at team processing a week ago in Eugene, and I have cried a lot since,” she said. “I know that I will be leaving her for only 10 days, and she will be just fine, and that so many other moms have done the same, but I can’t even imagine being away from her for half a day.” How wonderful (and necessary) it is for breastfeeding athletes and new moms to not have to make the choice working parents have to make all too often: career or child. We’ll be able to watch all of these amazing, inspirational mothers compete in the Tokyo Olympics starting July 23! Related Stories News What if my baby won’t burp after feeding? Viral TikTok sparks must-try tips News TikTok hack teaches kids the one word to yell for safety—and it’s not ‘HELP!’ Parenting ‘Did it hurt?’: A sibling’s sweet reaction to his little sister’s boo-boo melts hearts The latest Baby H5 bird flu outbreak: What families need to know to stay safe Baby The preemie crisis in America: Why the US keeps failing its most vulnerable babies News New study reveals what parents need to know about the link between air pollution and autism Baby E. coli outbreak sparks organic carrot recall across 18 states—check your fridge now