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Date: | Thu, 9 Sep 2004 11:25:45 -0500 |
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One "soft sign" that might be helpful to ask is, "So what handouts or other
informational sheets do you have about breastfeeding?" If the doctor has a
wide variety of LLL publications on hand, a copy of the AAP book to loan
out, video, flyer for local LLL meeting, etc., etc., that would be a good
thing. If the doc says, "Uhhh, we don't have many people ask for that
here," I think that also might be useful to know.
This would tell a couple of things: a) person could review the content of
said information and determine if it was really good material or not; b)
even if his/her attitude toward bf is "pro," does the pediatrician really
have the support tools on hand to help if problem does arise? (handouts
obviously don't take place of actual observation/coaching, but they can be
indicator of a "prepared ped"); c) is the overall attitude of the
pediatrician interested in teaching and counseling patients? Because this
is critical not just for successful bf, but for successful parenting: most
pediatric problems need education, not prescriptions.
Suzanne
Suzanne Berman, M.D., FAAP
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