Read Oxford Handbook of Midwifery Online
Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker
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The purpose of the programme is to ensure that newly qualified midwives and health visitors are equipped with the knowledge and skills needed to support breastfeeding effectively. Accreditation is awarded to an indi- vidual course, not to the institution itself. Higher education institutions (HEIs) can apply for accreditation for each of the courses they provide for the training of midwives or health visitors/public health nurses.
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Support for breastfeeding
The support the woman receives from her partner, family members, friends, health professionals, and support networks can affect the uptake and continuance of breastfeeding. Emotional support as well as prac- tical support is needed to empower mothers to breastfeed successfully. Various levels of support may be required by breastfeeding mothers, depending upon their social circumstances. Caregivers may find it easier to support breastfeeding mothers effectively if they have had the opportu- nity to come to terms with their own breastfeeding experiences.
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Partners
Family and friends
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About one in four mothers are helped by a relative or friend when they
have problems breastfeeding.
Peer support
NICE
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recommends that there should be easily accessible breastfeeding peer support programmes and that appropriately trained breastfeeding peer supporters should be part of a multidisciplinary team. It is also rec- ommends that breastfeeding peer supporters should contact mothers directly within 48h of their transfer to the community and offer them ongoing support according to their individual needs. This could be via tel- ephone, texting, face-to-face, local support groups or the internet.
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Breastfeeding peer support projects have been shown to:
Specialist infant feeding advisors
Many maternity units now employ specialist infant feeding advisers. Their role varies depending upon the needs of the local population and the requirements of the maternity units. There is very little research related to the role of the specialist feeding advisors but they can improve the care and support breastfeeding women receive by:
Their role is not to deskill the health professional, by taking over the carer
role for breastfeeding women, but to develop their skills and increase their knowledge base to ensure that all breastfeeding women are provided with evidence-based, sensitive, and consistent information and support.
Voluntary groups
There are a number of breastfeeding voluntary organizations, or organiza- tions that have expertise in supporting breastfeeding mothers in special circumstances in the UK, including:
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These organizations supply information and support, by telephone and in leaflets and books. Mothers should be offered leaflets or cards giving details about support organizations prior to leaving the postnatal ward.
Pediatrics
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, 224–7.
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Practices shown to be detrimental to successful breastfeeding
Inconsistent information
Despite efforts to ensure that appropriate advice and information are given to breastfeeding mothers, there is still evidence that, for many mothers, difficulty in establishing breastfeeding is compounded by incon- sistent advice.
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Conflicting advice does exist and persist, mostly as inac- curate information and practice.
Conflicting advice and information:
In order to prevent inconsistent advice, midwives need to:
An authoritarian approach to communication is unhelpful and even detrimental.
Use of pacifiers
The use of pacifiers (dummies) has become a widespread cultural practice in the UK. They are used to settle, soothe, or otherwise occupy a fretful or distressed baby.
Reasons given for using pacifiers have included:
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part of the weaning process.
The use of pacifiers has been implicated in:
No research to date explores the effect of bottle teats and/or pacifiers on the initiation of breastfeeding. However, there is concern by health professionals that their use may adversely affect initiation and establishment of breastfeeding. Conversely some evidence suggests that the use of pacifiers can reduce the incidence of cot death.
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PRACTICES DETRIMENTAL TO BREASTFEEDING
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The use of nipple shields
The use of nipple shields is sometimes advocated as treatment for sore nipples; however, little evidence is currently available to support this practice.
The use of nipple shields:
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