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Healthcare Providers and Breastfeeding
Experiences in the first hours and days after birth impact whether a mother starts and continues to breastfeed her infant.
Physicians and health professionals can:
- Counsel mothers on breastfeeding, skin to skin and rooming in during prenatal visits
- Refer mothers to a lactation consultant
- Support skin to skin contact
- Promote rooming-in
- Support breastfeeding exclusively for six months in the hospital and at well-baby visits
- Implement 6 for ME - 6 evidence based hospital practices to improve breastfeeding
- Help write policies that support mothers and babies to breastfeed
Breastfeeding in Maine; A Data Brief for Healthcare Professionals
Maternity Practices in Infant Nutrition Care Survey Results
According to the U.S. CDC, breastmilk is the optimal food for growth and development of infants. Breastfeeding is also an effective approach to reducing lifelong risk for chronic disease.[1] Studies show only 40 percent of mothers meet their exclusive breastfeeding goals.[2]
Healthcare Breastfeeding Resources
Data
- Breastfeeding in Maine; A Data Brief (PDF) for Healthcare Professionals
- U.S. CDC Vital Signs: Hospital Actions Affect Breastfeeding
- Improvements in Maternity Care Policies and Practices that Support Breastfeeding-United States, 2007-2013
- Read the transcript of the media briefing and read the press release.
- Listen to the archived recording of the Vital Signs town hall on Hospital Actions Affect Breastfeeding
- 2015 mPINC (Maine's Maternity Care Practices in Infant Nutrition & Care):
- 2014 PRAMS:
- 2016 CDC BF Report Card:
General Breastfeeding Resources
- American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Breastfeeding List of Educational Courses and Materials
- Let's Go! Healthcare Toolkit
- AAP 10 Steps to Support Parents' Choice to Breastfeed Their Baby
- Baby Friendly USA
- Texas Ten Steps Baby Friendly Hospital Video Series A series of five minute videos that provide an overview of each of the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding.
- Does Breastfeeding Reduce the Risk of Pediatric Overweight? Research to Practice (PDF)
Free Breastfeeding Management Self Study Guides
- Expanding Clinicians' Roles in Breastfeeding Support This 1.5 hour tutorial in combination with the 1.5 hour tutorial below provide 3 hours of breastfeeding education that is aligned with the content expected for physicians providing care in facilities implementing the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding or are designated as Baby-Friendly facilities. Continuing Medical Education (CME) Online Tutorial (CME #1) 1.5 CME. Available at no cost.
- Expanding Clinicians' Roles in Breastfeeding Support: Focus on Maternal & Infant Care Prenatally and During Hospital Stay This 1.5 hour tutorial in combination with the 1.5 hour tutorial below provide 3 hours of breastfeeding education that is aligned with the content expected for physicians providing care in facilities implementing the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding or are designated as Baby-Friendly facilities. Continuing Medical Education (CME) Online Tutorial (CME #1) 1.5 CME. Available at no cost.
- Physician Breastfeeding Webinar Series This series provides free CMEs free of charge until June 2019. The Maryland Hospital Breastfeeding Policy Committee coordinated a six-lecture series of free webinars about breastfeeding-related topics. Each of these educational opportunities features a different topic and is provided by expert physicians in the field. Training sessions are aligned with the content expected for physicians providing care in facilities implementing the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding or are designated as Baby-Friendly facilities. Available at no cost.
- Wellstart International (2013) Lactation Management Self-Study Modules, Level 1, Fourth Edition, Shelburne, Vermont: Wellstart International. Available at no cost.
- The AAPs Health Professional's Breastfeeding Resource Guide Available at no cost.
[1] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Strategies to Prevent Obesity and other Chronic Diseases: The CDC Guide to Strategies to Support Breastfeeding Mothers and Babies. Atlanta: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 2013, page 3. Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/breastfeeding/pdf/BF-Guide-508.PDF Accessed 12.11.15
[2] Perrine et al. Baby-Friendly Hospital Practices and Meeting Exclusive Breastfeeding Intention. PEDIATRICS 2012;130(1).