Guest guest Posted September 6, 2010 Report Share Posted September 6, 2010 Dear Colleagues: This is an amazing discussion. Thank you Tow for your articulate writing and formalizing the topic. Communication between people is always a challenge. What one person hears, and then tells another, changes. Remember the kindergarten game of " Telephone " ? Who was it that posted about working with a mom as a hospital LC, and have that same mom calling for help from a LLL, who was that same hospital LC. The mother reported things that the LLL/LC knew hadn't been advised. Classic example. Hospitals are factories. As such, they are subject to the rules and regulations that govern factories. I believe it is good to keep working to make those rules and regulations accepting of breastfeeding, particularly when I am seeing more and more physicians (students, residents, and attendings) seeking breastfeeding education. If all that gets formula out of hospitals, we have done excellent work. If all that gets skin to skin to be routine, we have done excellent work. Mothers are stressed beyond their physical, metabolic, psychological and energetic reserves in hospitals. It is amazing that as any women are breastfeeding. Everything that is happening to breastfeeding in hospitals has happened to childbirth education and to birth; i.e. being gobbled up by the factory. I published an article in Midwifery Today,( " The Missing Squatting Bar. " back in the 90s, about the struggles childbirth educators were having with their mission to educate versus being respected by hospitals/physicians. One example: Our local birth factory called the head of a private childbirth education business and virtually told her to stop teaching about the risks of pitocin, " because we use a lot of it here. " Don't want to upset the parents now, do we? And if she hadn't complied, all the physician practices would have stopped referring their clients to her for classes and her business would have died. What I hated most about teaching childbirth education classes was the agonizing egg walking, the fear that I would say something that would get back to my bosses and get me fired. Paolo Freire, the great Brazilian educator, said something like this: " Education either liberates or oppresses. It can not be used to hold the status quo. " We can either teach mothers what really works, or teach them to listen to their doctors. What is happening with breastfeeding now is particularly wonderful. Our government, via the CDC, has gotten some of the truth about birth (wonderful mPINC study) and breastfeeding. This has fueled change in the new JCAHO guidelines in their perinatal care set. This has fueled the awarding of grant monies. And then you have all of us, at the other end of the health care spectrum, working hard, speaking truth and working our way into the system. Now we have the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine! What is helping too is that there is no money for health care. We can't afford to have sick babies. We can't afford to have our young people so fat that 25% of them can't serve in the armed forces. This terrible situation is getting attention that will be helpful to our efforts. Hospitals have been, are, and will probably always be factories and they can continue to improve. One sign of this in my area is that I gave a Grand Rounds about breastfeeding to Obstetricians (residents and attendings) at one major teaching institution. 2 weeks later, I was asked to give a Grand Rounds by another....the word had spread. This is wonderful and a sign of our changing times. Just my drops of newborn milk.... warmly, Nikki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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