Those of you who attended ILCA 2006 may recall Kay Hoover's welcome spech,
where she alluded to a Philadelphia-based, population-based study on IBCLCs
in the hospital (for which she was the second-listed author). It has now
been published -- and provides an evidence-based *epidemiologic* study
showing that having IBCLCs on staff at a hospital -- even part-time --
increases the rates of BF at discharge among ALL groups of women, but
particularly amongst the groups of women who were least likely to BF.
The numbers are staggering. Here is one eye-popper: "Among Medicaid
recipients, the odds of BF at hospital discharge were 4.13 times higher for
women who delivered at a facility with an IBCLC than women who delivered at
a facility without an IBCLC. Delivering at a facility with an IBCLC was
associated with a three times increase in the odds of BF at hospital
discharge among mothers younger than 20 years and among women who
experienced a poor birth outcome."
The conclusion states that it cannot identify exactly what it is that IBCLC
presence does to increase BF: increased individual contact with moms? change
in staff attitude or policy? But who cares? This study tells us, based on
demographic data, that *IBCLCs* increase BF rates.
Now, this may seem like a "Doh" study to those of us in the field, but it is
important for several reasons:
(1) We now have powerful statistics to show that the *IBCLC* credential has
demonstrated and proven ability to increase BF rates. This study proves the
value of hiring a holder of the "gold standard" credential.
(2) Hospital administrators and number-crunchers are going to be wowed by
these numbers. These numbers ought to knock the socks off of any hospital
administrator who is concerned about the "costs" of hiring an IBCLC.
"Several studies estimated that the medical costs for infants who are not BF
exceed those of BF infants by approx $400 annually per infant."
In other words, we can take lactation consultant promotion out of the realm
of what I call "warm fuzzy mommyness," and into the cold hard realm of the
bottom dollar. And that may be what is needed to enhance and promote our
profession, and our IBCLC credential.
Here is the Pub Med abstract:
1: J Public Health Manag Pract. 2006 November/December;12(6):578-585. Links
A Comparison of Breastfeeding Rates in an Urban Birth Cohort Among Women
Delivering Infants at Hospitals That Employ and Do Not Employ Lactation
Consultants.Castrucci BC, Hoover KL, Lim S, Maus KC.
Brian C. Castrucci, MA, Director, Family Health Research and Program
Development Unit, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin.
Kathleen L. Hoover, MEd, IBCLC, is Lactation Consultant, Division of
Maternal, Child and Family Health, Philadelphia Department of Public Health,
Philadelphia. Suet Lim, PhD, is Acting Director, Division of Chronic Disease
Prevention, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Philadelphia.
Katherine C. Maus, ACSW, LSW, is Director, Division of Maternal, Child and
Family Health, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Philadelphia.
OBJECTIVE: To compare rates of breastfeeding at hospital discharge between
facilities that employ and do not employ International Board Certified
Lactation Consultants (IBCLCs). METHODS: This study used a cross-sectional
design. Data from 11,525 birth certificates of Philadelphia residents who
delivered in 2003 were used. Breastfeeding was assessed using a question
included on the Pennsylvania birth record, "Is the infant being breastfed at
discharge?" The Philadelphia Department of Public Health's lactation
consultants collected information on number of hours worked annually by
IBCLCs by facility. RESULTS: After adjusting for race/ethnicity, education,
insurance status, age, marital status, route of delivery, birth weight, and
gestational age, delivering in a hospital that employed an IBCLC was
associated with a 2.28 (95% confidence interval [CI] =1.98,2.62) times
increase in the odds of breastfeeding at hospital discharge. Among women
receiving Medicaid, delivering at a hospital that employed IBCLCs was
associated with a 4.13 (95% CI =3.22,4.80) times increase in the odds of
breastfeeding at hospital discharge. CONCLUSIONS: The findings presented
here identify an association between delivering at a facility that employs
IBCLCs and breastfeeding at hospital discharge. As the strength of this
association is not negligible, particularly for women on Medicaid, these
findings may be used to encourage widespread use of IBCLCs.
PMID: 17041307 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Liz Brooks, JD, IBCLC
Wyndmoor, PA, USA
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