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BREASTFEEDING AND THE USE OF HUMAN MILK An Update on the AAP Policy Statement A. Ildiko Martonffy, M.D. The Breastfeeding Coalition of South Central Wisconsin – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk


1
Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk
  • An Update on the AAP Policy Statement
  • A. Ildiko Martonffy, M.D.
  • The Breastfeeding Coalition of South Central
    Wisconsin
  • April 19, 2012

2
Objectives
  • Discuss recent AAP Policy Statement on
    Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk
  • Explain differences between recent and past
    policy statements
  • Discuss ways in which we can work together to
    make recommended breastfeeding goals a reality
    in our communities
  • Have fun in the company of other lactivists!

3
Previous Policy Statement
  • Published in December, 1997 Pediatrics
  • AAPs Work Group on Breastfeeding
  • chaired by Lawrence Gartner, M.D.
  • AAP position human milk is uniquely superior
    for infant feeding and all substitute feeding
    options differ markedly from it
  • Interesting initial backlash (but ultimate
    support)
  • National Organization for Women working moms
  • Misinterpreted as being told we should feed 12
    times a day for 30 minutes each feed for 1 full
    year

4
Specifics of Previous Statement
  • Initiate within first hour of life
  • Feed 8-12 times a day, at earliest signs of
    hunger
  • Continuous rooming-in
  • Formal lactation support
  • Hospital follow up 48-72 hours after discharge
  • Avoid supplementation and pacifiers until
    breastfeeding is well established
  • Assess for adequacy of intake by 5-7 days of age,
    6 wets/day
  • Exclusive for approximately the first 6 months
    and continue for at least 12 months and
    thereafter for as long as mutually desired
  • Only selective iron and vitamin D supplementation

5
and
  • Improved education of medical students and
    residents
  • Promotion of hospital policies that facilitate
    breastfeeding and work toward eliminating
    infant formula discharge packs
  • Encouraging media to portray breastfeeding as
    positive and the norm
  • Sounds fairly decent! So what happened?

6
Barriers
  • Operative births
  • Cost
  • Of training
  • Of not accepting formula samples
  • Lack of buy in from key player
  • And more

7
Fast Forward were not there yet!
  • January, 2011 Surgeon Generals Call to Action
  • New AAP Policy Statement
  • Released on-line February 27, 2012
  • Both recognize infant nutrition as a Public
    Health issue and not just a lifestyle choice and
    recognize health risks of NOT breastfeeding
  • New AAP statement more in keeping with WHO
    guidelines and Call to Action recommendations

8
Where are we?CDC Breastfeeding Report Card
2007 2010 Target 2020 Target
Any BF
Ever 75.0 75 81.9
6 mos 43.8 50 60.5
1yr 22.4 25 34.1
Exclusive BF
To 3 mos 33.5 40 44.3
To 6 mos 13.8 17 23.7
Worksite support 25 --- 38
Formula in 1st 48h 25.6 --- 15.6
9
Room for improvement
  • Past decade modest increase in rate of any
    breastfeeding at 3 months and 6 months but
    Healthy People 2010 targets still not met
  • 24 of maternity services provide supplements of
    formula as a general practice in the first 48
    hours
  • Must work on improving hospital practices to meet
    2020 targets

10
AAP Policy Specificsepidemiology (number
crunching)
  • AHRQ data highlights
  • Pneumonia risk reduced 72 if exclusive BF gt
    4mos compared to EBF gt 6 mos, 4 fold increase in
    pneumonia if EBF 4-6 months
  • OM any BF reduces incidence by 23, EBF gt 3 mos
    reduces by 50 serious colds, ear and throat
    infection reduced 63 if EBF 6 mos or more
  • GI Any BF 64 reduction in GI infection effect
    lasts for 2 mos after cessation of BF
  • NEC NNT 8 with exclusive breast milk diet to
    prevent 1 case of NEC requiring surgery or
    resulting in death

11
and more
  • SIDS 36 reduced risk of SIDS (OR 0.55 for any
    BF and 0.27 for exclusive BF). 21 of US infant
    mortality attributed in part to increased SIDS in
    infants who were never breastfed. 900 lives/yr
    in USA could be saved if 90 of moms EBF x 6 mos
  • Atopic disease EBF 3-4 mos 27 risk reduction in
    low-risk, 42 in babe with family history
  • Celiac 52 reduction if breastfed at time of
    gluten exposure
  • Obesity 4 risk reduction per month of
    breastfeeding

12
it just gets better, baby!
  • DM I up to 30 reduction with 3 mos of EBF
  • Theory early cows milk ß-lactoglobulin exposure
    stimulates immune-mediated process, reaction with
    pancreatic ß cells
  • DMII 40 reduction self regulation, weight
  • Leukemia/lymphoma correlated with duration
  • How? Reduction of infections vs. direct mechanism
  • NICU NEC, neurodevelopment, retinopathy
  • all preterm infants should receive human milk
  • pasteurized donor human milk, appropriately
    fortified, should be used if mother's own milk is
    unavailable or its use in contraindicated

13
Better for Mama, too!
  • Short term
  • Decreased blood loss
  • Child spacing
  • Higher risk for post-partum depression of wean
    early
  • Long term
  • If NO gestational DM, decreased risk of DM II
    (4-12)
  • NHANES decreased RA, cumulative effect
  • ? - cumulative BF 12-23 months -gtreduced HTN,
    hyperlipidemia, CAD and DM
  • Cumulative BF gt 12 months, 28 decrease in breast
    cancer and ovarian cancer
  • if 90 of US moms EBF x 6 mos, 13 billion/year

14
So AAP now says
  • The AAP recommends exclusive breastfeeding for
    about 6 months, with continuation of
    breastfeeding for 1 year or longer as mutually
    desired by mother and infant, a recommendation
    concurred to by the WHO and the Institute of
    Medicine.

15
Why the change to a solid 6?
  • Outcome differences when EBF 4 vs. 6 months
  • GI disease, otitis media, respiratory illnesses,
    topic disease and maternal benefits
  • Culturally sensitive aware that some will
    introduce complementary foods sooner than 6
    months, stress that this be done while the
    infant is feeding only breast milk
  • Mothers should be encouraged to continue
    breastfeeding through the first year and beyond
    as more and varied complementary foods are
    introduced.

16
Recognized Contraindications
  • No breastfeeding or expressed milk
  • Galactosemia
  • Mom with human T-cell lymphotrophic virus I or II
  • Untreated brucellosis
  • HIV positive mom in industrialized world
  • No breastfeeding but okay to use expressed milk
  • Active, untreated tuberculosis
  • Active herpes simplex lesion on the breast
  • Mom with varicella (chicken pox) 5 days before
    through 2 days after delivery
  • H1N1 (from 2009)

17
More about Mama
  • Diet 450-500 extra kcal/day
  • 200-300mg of DHA fatty acids
  • 1-2 portions of fish/week (herring, tuna,
    salmon), minimizing predatory fish (pike, marlin,
    swordfish)
  • If vegan, consider DHA supplement, MVI (B12)
  • Medications
  • AAP recommends LactMed as most comprehensive,
    up-to-date source of information
  • AAP is working on a policy statement for
    medications
  • Insufficient data on may psychiatric medications
  • Least problematic amitriptyline, clomipramine,
    paroxetine, sertraline

18
So, how do we get there?
19
Hospital Care
  • AAP Sample Hospital Breastfeeding Policy
  • Based on WHOs Ten Steps to Successful
    Breastfeeding
  • Emphasizes need
  • To NOT interfere with early skin-to-skin contact
  • To NOT provide glucose water or formula without
    medical indication
  • To NOT restrict time baby spends with mom
  • To NOT limit feeding duration
  • For NO unlimited pacifier use
  • BF in first hour, exclusive BH, rooming-in,
    avoiding pacifiers, getting phone number for
    post-discharge support ? increased breastfeeding
    duration regardless of socioeconomic status

20
The Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding, World
Health Organization United Nations Childrens
Fund
  • Have a written breastfeeding policy that is
    routinely communicated to all health care staff.
  • Train all health care staff in skills necessary
    to implement this policy.
  • Inform all pregnant women about the benefits and
    management of breastfeeding
  • Help mothers initiate breastfeeding within a
    half-hour of birth.
  • Show mothers how to breastfeed, and how to
    maintain lactation even if they should be
    separated from their infants.
  • Give newborn infants no food or drink other than
    breast milk, unless medically indicated.
  • Practice rooming-inallow mothers and infants to
    remain together 24 hours a day.
  • Encourage breastfeeding on demand.
  • Give no artificial teats or pacifiers to
    breastfeeding infants.
  • Foster the establishment of breastfeeding support
    groups and refer mothers to them on discharge
    from the hospital or clinic.

21
But
  • CDC National survey of gt 80 of US hospitals
  • Only 37 of US birth centers practice gt 5/10
    steps and only 3.5 practice 9 to 10 steps
  • 58 advised moms to limit sucking at the breast
    to a specific length of time (lower BF rates and
    duration)
  • 41 gave pacifiers to more than some newborns
    (lower BF rates and duration)
  • In 30 of hospitals, more than half received
    supplementation with formula (shorter duration of
    BF, less exclusivity)
  • change attitudes and eradicate unsubstantiated
    beliefs about the supposed equivalency of
    breastfeeding and commercial infant formula
    feeding.

22
Pacifier Party Line
  • limited to specific medical situations like
    for pain relief or as part of a program to
    enhance oral motor function
  • Yes, they are associated with reduction in SIDS
    incidence.
  • So use pacifiers at infant nap or sleep time
    after breastfeeding is well established, at
    approximately 3 to 4 weeks of age

23
Vitamins Supplements
  • Vitamin K 0.5 to 1mg IM x once to reduce risk of
    hemorrhagic disease of the newborn. A delay
    until after the first feeding at the breast but
    not later than 6 hours of age is recommended.
  • Vitamin D 400 IU orally each day, beginning at
    hospital discharge (AAP does not mention
    supplementing mom instead of babe)
  • Fluoride none for 1st 6 months, then only if
    water concentration is lt0.3ppm
  • Iron and zinc containing foods at 6 months for
  • Premies multivitamin and iron orally

24
WHO and how to grow
  • As of 9/2010, CDC and AAP recommend use of the
    WHO growth curves for all children younger than
    24 months
  • CDC charts are based on data from mostly
    formula-fed Caucasian infants
  • WHO curves reflect optimal growth of the
    breastfed infant and include data from Brazil,
    Ghana, India, Norway, Oman and USA

25
Heres whats up, Doc!pediatricians role (aap
wording)
  • Promote BF as the norm for infant feeding
  • Learn about principles and management of
    lactation and breastfeeding
  • Learn to assess adequacy of breastfeeding
  • Support training and education in BF and lactation
  • Promote hospital policies that follow WHO/UNICEF
    Ten Steps
  • Collaborate with OB community to develop optimal
    BF support programs
  • Coordinate with other care providers to ensure
    uniform, comprehensive BF support

applicable to any health care worker
26
  • communicating with families that breastfeeding
    is a medical priority that is enthusiastically
    recommended by their personal pediatrician will
    build support for mothers in the early weeks
    postpartum
  • Attention called to Academy of Breastfeeding
    Medicine protocols, especially unrestricted time
    for BF to minimize hyperbilirubinemia and
    hypoglycemia
  • Importance of close outpatient follow up stressed
  • Encourage physicians to be breastfeeding advocates

27
what about business?
Mother-baby friendly worksite ? reduction in
health care costs, lower absenteeism, reduction
in turnover, improved morale and
productivity For every 1 invested in lactation
support, there is a 2-3 return The Business
Case for Breastfeeding Provides details of
economic benefits to the employer and toolkits
for creation of lactation support
programs Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010 mandates reasonable break time for
nursing mothers and private, non-bathroom areas
to express breast milk during the work day
28
in conclusion
  • Breastfeeding and the use of human milk confer
    unique nutritional and non-nutritional benefits
    to the infant and the mother and, in turn,
    optimize infant, child, and adult health as well
    as child growth and development. Recently,
    published evidence-based studies have confirmed
    and quantitated the risks of not breastfeeding.
    Thus, infant feeding should not be considered as
    a lifestyle choice but rather as a basic health
    issue.

29
whats old is new again
  • Much of this information is not new
  • AAP recognition of it and emphasis on it IS new
  • Carefully chosen wording
  • Will the policy statement change behaviors?

30
From Inside to OutsidePoem by Rhianna's Dad on
her Behalf. http//laitdamour.eu/index.php?main_pa
gepageid13
  • beforeyou were an angel not yet
    incarnate,unfurling your blameless wings inside
    menowyour little body still moulds itselfto
    my shape, mouth an extensionof our continued
    oneness,your soft head nestled in my arm your
    eyelashes moving like butterfliesas you delay -
    your flight - a little - longer

31
References
  • Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk. Section
    on Breastfeeding. Pediatrics Vol. 129 No.3
    March1, 2012. pp. e827-e841
  • American Academy of Pediatrics Work Group on
    Breastfeeding. Breastfeeding and the use of human
    milk. Pediatrics 19971001035-39.
  • Rowe-Murray, H. J. and Fisher, J. R. (2002), Baby
    Friendly Hospital Practices Cesarean Section is
    a Persistent Barrier to Early Initiation of
    Breastfeeding. Birth, 29 124131.
    doi 10.1046/j.1523-536X.2002.00172.x
  • Ip S, Chung M, Raman G, et al Tufts-New England
    Medical Center Evidence-based Practice Center.
    Breastfeeding and maternal and infant health
    outcomes in developed countries. Evid Rep
    Technol Assess (Full Rep). 2007 153(153)1-186.
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