It is deeply disappointing that the response from Ros Escott does not answer any of the important
legal dilemmas by the scope of practice that IBCLE presented. I'm perhaps reiterating what has
already been said far more articulately, but here are what I see to be deep legal problems:
First, in terms of HIPAA regulations, as I understand from Liz Brooks posting, we cannot retaliate
against a client who wants to preserve her right not to give permission to discuss our visit with
other health care practitioners. HIPAA was designed to protect the rights of the client and it has
turned into a paperwork nightmare that has been badly twisted from its original purpose. To deny
treatment is, in my mind, a perversion of the original intent.
Second, as mentioned many many times, we are required to provide evidence based information.
Not doing so may put mothers and babies at risk. There have been numerous examples on
Lactnet of such situations. Thus, this puts us in complete and total risk of lawsuits if a baby is
compromised that could otherwise have been saved. In fact, Lawrence Gartner spoke of such a
case at one of the conferences when he spoke of hyperbilirubinemia.
Third, the IBCLE states that IBCLCs ARE health care practitioners on the website. THerefore, if we
learn something new and contradict what we previously told mothers to the best of our ability at
the time, are we contradicting ourselves and could we have our credential yanked because of we
contracdicted ourselves.
Fourth, the scope of practice that was taken down did not specify which health care practitioner.
Health care practitioners contradict each other all the time. OBs contradict pediatricians.
Pediatricians contradict OBs. Pediatricians contradict each other. Contradiction is a form of
dialogue that actually enables one to arrive at the best treatment possible.
Fifth, I have not yet found any scope of practice description for any allied health care practitioner
that has the specification that they not contradict a health care pracitioner. Not one. If anyone
does find a scope of practice from another allied health care practitioner.
Sixth, it seems to me that by saying we may not contradict someone is an infringement of US
constitutional law to our right to freedom of speech. This to me seems to be a huge legal
violation.
Contradicting is not ignoring advice, nor is it prescribing. We are the specialists and should be
treated as such. If this is the vision of the IBCLE and I hope it is not, then we are truly viewed as
less than peer counselors and it will lead to a complete and total inability to help women. Why
would anyone want to enter a profession whereby we cannot politely contradict and educate
others? The pharmaceutical industry and the food industry would have far more freedom to
distribute misleading information than we have to provide evidence-based advice.
In fact, Nancy Morbacher's talk at the last NYLCA conference would be called into question in its
entirety because it directly contradicted the obstetrician on the panel just prior to her talk. Just
about every bit of Nancy Morbacher's evidence based presentation contradicted the obstetrician's
comments about pumping.
I guess I should sign up for a CLE or CLC course right now. I'd have no rules to abide by and
parents would not even know the difference.
I for one, thought this profession was a "specialist" profession whereby we would be held in
esteem for our specialized knowledge. To realize that we are really considered below a peer
counselor to the point that we cannot even speak the truth is more than disappointing. I feel
completely and totally betrayed by the cheery message about what IBCLCs are supposed to
represent.
Best regards, Susan E. Burger, MHS, PhD, IBCLC (formerly proud of the last five letters and now
deeply mortified)
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