Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Jul. 13th, 2008

ocelot: (Default)
The hospital I volunteer at is working to become Baby Friendly, which means they provide a high standard of care as far as breastfeeding support goes.

This includes 10 steps:

1 - Maintain a written breastfeeding policy that is routinely communicated to all health care staff.
2 - Train all health care staff in skills necessary to implement this policy.
3 - Inform all pregnant women about the benefits and management of breastfeeding.
4 - Help mothers initiate breastfeeding within one hour of birth.
5 - Show mothers how to breastfeed and how to maintain lactation, even if they are separated from their infants.
6 - Give infants no food or drink other than breastmilk, unless medically indicated.
7 - Practice “rooming in”-- allow mothers and infants to remain together 24 hours a day.
8 - Encourage unrestricted breastfeeding.
9 - Give no pacifiers or artificial nipples to breastfeeding infants.
10 - Foster the establishment of breastfeeding support groups and refer mothers to them on discharge from the hospital or clinic

Yesterday, I noticed a posting detailing recent steps taken and steps to be completed. Included in steps to be completed were "remove formula instruction from parent education video and manual" (the hospital gives a ~100 page infant-care manual to parents who have a baby there). This seems to me to be taking things over into abstinence-only education territory, and beyond the baby-friendly steps.

I'm a breastfeeding advocate. I'm proud that our breastfeeding rate is so high (something like 97% attempting, 90% exclusively breastfeeding at the time of release), and that we're close to obtaining Baby Friendly status. But this move strikes me as neglectful and potentially dangerous.

People using formula need to know how to do so properly. Babies here in the US die from improper formula usage. Some percentage of the patients are going to end up using formula at some point, whether out of choice, medical necessity, or because they must return to a job that does not provide adequate opportunity for pumping. These patients may not be identifiable before discharge from the hospital (especially a hospital that so strongly encourages breastfeeding), and, considering they may not take their child for well-baby visits, the hospital may be the only opportunity to educate them.

They don't have to promote formula, or support it's usage in the hospital, but not at least providing the information seems wrong.

ETA: I found my copy of the manual. The breastfeeding section is 30 pages of what (at a quick glance) seems to be very good, helpful info. The formula section is 2 pages, and presented after the breastfeeding section. It's certainly not advocating formula usage in the current form.

Profile

ocelot: (Default)
ocelot

April 2011

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627 282930

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Page generated Sep. 12th, 2025 08:00 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios