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Wed, 19 Mar 2008 14:15:17 -0400 |
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I am a staff RN/IBCLC. I have to come up with ways to teach not train RN's
the same thing. If you can be creative with ways breastfeeding may make
their jobs easier you will win them over. We are understaffed and over
worked. I taught the Labor nurses (you could use this with the MNN) how to
teach the sidelying position. In my example, I showed the Labor nurses how
to help the moms with vaginal births to get in the sidelying position. Putting
their babes snuggled next to them. The babies self latched and the nurses
got all their charting done. They loved it. And look at the outcome. babies
where self attaching, moms where becoming confident in their mothering skills,
and all that wonderful skin to skin. Thats one example. Another might be to
bring in some of the protocols from the academy or breastfeeding medicine. It
may speak to some of the nurses. The info they have is wonderful on co-
sleeping, hypoglycemia, breastfeeding the near-term infant etc. Is the class
mandatory or not. If not then I would think the nurses are going to increase
their knowlege base about breastfeeding. I like your idea of bringing in some
case studied from the JHL. I bring in the page called ILCA's inside track. Bring
lots of those from older journals. Those are short and sweet and packed with
good info. For some nurses, just going over how to correctly place a nipple
shield how to help them help their pts get a nice asymettic latch,or how to
get moms pumping correctly might be helpful. I wrote a "how to tell if your
baby is hungry" crib card and stated all the hunger cues for parents. The
nurses use it too. talk about pacifiers slowing down the babies ability to learn
to suck at the breast and why. I started with that sorta stuff when I did the
mandatory station for all the RN's throughout the system. In my opinion,
based on being a RN on the floor (before I was certified) I loved info that I
could really use. Like in the middle of the night when your day old baby is
screaming, maybe a gentle massage on the lower part of the belly, the
desending colon to help pass meconium and gas. I teach this to most of my
moms now and the nurses listen. Why it is okay to let a baby sleep 6 hours
after a good feed after delivery. Okay i rambled too long.
I hope that helps, hope you have a captive audience.
best,
robin
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