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Date: | Thu, 29 Mar 2007 00:41:10 EDT |
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LOIS WROTE:
"Dear Melissa, I hate to see you so upset but just a thought, babies need
to get a good start and in the hospitals there is so much difficulty
getting that done. Being a hospital LC I can help get a mother-baby
through this difficult time and being an RN helps me deal with the
doctors. " Lois
I work as an LC at a small community hospital. I was hired over ten years
ago on the basis of my IBCLC status alone. The previous LC, a master's degree
perinatal nurse specialist who six years before that had initiated changes
in hospital policies to be in accord with Baby Friendly principles, had
recommended me for the position.
Most of the physicians do not know that I hold a doctorate degree in
chiropractic, nor that I taught anatomy for several years. It does give me an
advantage as I have an extensive knowledge base (having studied from the same
textbooks that medical students did at that time) and still surprise myself when
I can recall a particular condition that I learned about over 30 years ago.
So I understand Lois's ability to work with HCPs is enhanced by her RN
status.
Yet it is my extensive reading and attendance at breastfeeding
seminars/conferences, and the auditing of a few courses at a local medical school over
that past 30 years, along with my workday routine that keeps me informed and
able to converse with the HCPs. I first note all the mothers who have delivered
in my discharge follow-up notebook. Then I look at the charts and
particularly the histories so I know if the mother is taking or has been taking any
medications, any health issues, social issues, etc., and I might read from our
reference texts to fill me in on any conditions about which I might want to
know more detail. Then I get a report from the nurses on the nursing dyads
before I visit with them.
I am sitting the exam this summer and renewing my IBCLC status (for the 4th
time) because it is required by hospital policy that a person holding the
title of Lactation Consultant there be an IBCLC (and not necessarily an RN).
The panel who developed the lactation program had the foresight to see that an
LC's job is about the breastfeeding family and all the work time is devoted
to lactation so that the mothers and babies are well-served. And they viewed
the ICBLC credentialed person as providing that.
Mardrey Swenson
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