I just wanted to say that most patients will see anyone who works around babies and/or moms as qualified to give advice on breastfeeding. A friend of mine just delivered her second in Florida the other day - during her stay she asked everyone who came into her room for help with BF and got a different answer each time. Finally, when she was sent home, they kindly gave her extra sugar water to prevent jaundice and fill her tummy up between feeds! (I told her, next time you are hungry, go grab yourself a big glass of water and see if that helps). The really scary thing is that people will do whatever you tell them to do if they think you are qualified. One solution is to require all nurses and doctors who choose to make a career out of maternal/child become IBCLC. A bit unrealistic, I know but my fantasy anyway. Hospital LC's could exist side-by-side with private practice LC's - one picking up where the other left off. Okay, time to wake up from my dream world! Debbie Destiny is not a matter of chance but a matter of choice. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ Debbie Codding, RN Mother-Infant Unit, Oak Harbor (Whidbey Island), WA [log in to unmask]