Choosing a Knowledgeable
Health Care Provider
by Barbara L. Behrmann,
Ph.D.
(c) 2005
Physicians agree that breastfeeding provides your baby with significant
nutritional, immunological and developmental “benefits.” Yet, studies
reveal that many pediatricians, obstetricians and family physicians are
ill-equipped to properly counsel breast-feeding mothers. Medical
mismanagement of easily preventable or treatable breastfeeding problems is
common. Here are a few tips to help you find a doctor or other health care
provider with nursing know-how:
?Ask the right questions ahead of time.
“It is not enough to ask, ‘Do you support
breastfeeding?’ explains Dr. Ruth Lawrence, one of the nation’s leading
breastfeeding experts, ”because every doctor would say yes. Ask him or her what
percentage of patients breastfeed. Pediatricians who support breastfeeding
attract breastfeeding mothers,” she adds. “If they have children, ask them how
their own children were fed.” This is actually what inspires many doctors to
learn about breastfeeding.
?Find out what kind of lactation
assistance and support your health-care provider offers patients.
How do they handle breastfeeding problems? Do
they have a lactation consultant on staff? If so, make sure she is
Internationally board-certified (with the letters IBCLC following her name). If
there is no consultant, do they have someone to whom they can refer you?
?Know
the difference between a lactation consultant and a lactation counselor or
educator.
Lactation consultants offer “top of the
line” clinical expertise; lactation counselors provide clinical help and
support for women with easily overcome difficulties; and lactation educators
educate the public on breastfeeding-related issues. They all play valuable
roles. But hospitals and other healthcare facilities don’t always make careful
distinctions in the services they provide, and you may not realize that the
titles connote different levels of expertise.
The only official title for
breastfeeding professionals is that of International Board Certified Lactation
Consultant – IBCLC. To become an IBCLC, an applicant must have spent
thousands of hours working with nursing mothers, have certain educational
qualifications, and pass an internationally certified exam. A lactation
counselor, who participates in a one-week 40- hour course and passes their
exam, may offer wonderful help to women encountering common and easily corrected
problems, but may be unable to recognize when women need greater intervention.
The risk, of course, is that you may think you’ve gotten as much help as
possible and give up if your problems continue, without realizing there are
people with more knowledge and experience who could have assisted you.
To locate a
lactation consultant, visit the International Lactation Consultant Association
web site at
www.ilca.org (919-861-5577).
?Look for indirect evidence of breastfeeding
support in the office itself.
Is there a comfortable place for mothers to
nurse their babies while waiting to see the doctor? Do posters or artwork
depict positive breastfeeding images? Conversely, are there a lot of formula
promotional materials lying around the office? Does the office freely hand out
formula samples? All of this sends important messages to families.
?Ask around town.
Physicians’ track records are pretty well-known
within a community. Talk to other mothers, along with childbirth educators,
doulas, and others with insights into your local medical community.
?Don’t rely only on your doctor for information.
Midwives, childbirth educators, lactation
consultants, nurses and La Leche League leaders can all provide breastfeeding
assistance, advice and support.
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Emma's Story: A Prenatal Consultation
Despite having gone through medical
school myself and having practiced for many years, I didn’t know a thing about
lactation. I barely remember it being mentioned in medical school and I
certainly didn’t understand it from a medical or physiologic perspective when I
graduated - let alone years later when I was expecting my first child.
One of my friends, a pediatrician, is
an extremely strong advocate of nursing, both in her personal life and in her
practice. She paid her nurse practitioner to become trained as a certified
lactation consultant and If parents come for a prenatal interview, she also has
them see the lactation consultant.
Although I wasn’t using her practice, my friend encouraged me to seek out a
lactation consultant for a prenatal consultation. At that point, I was
ambivalent about nursing, though she and my husband were encouraging me to give
it a try. I had some health concerns and I didn’t know if certain
medications I took would make breastfeeding problematic. When I was
starting my third trimester, I phoned up the lactation consultant at the
hospital where I planned to deliver. I’m so glad I saw her, then, when I
was well-rested and physically felt great. I could focus on our
conversation and had lots of time to think through what I had learned, without
any pressure. It was a good time to be learning and thinking, better than
right after the baby is born. If that first meeting had been after a long
labor, a c-section, or a sleepless night, I can imagine having had a very
different outcome. Also, because I saw her before I gave birth, we had
time to check out everything ahead of time, to find out that my medications were
not a problem.
More importantly, my consultation with
her got me much more enthused about breastfeeding. I became amazed by it,
awed. I had never given it a thought as a biological function of my body.
As a pregnant woman, I was reveling in the process of nurturing the new life
inside of me. I ate and drank and my baby grew and developed. I
thought that would end when I gave birth. Now I saw that this could
continue, through nursing. I would eat and drink and my child would grow.
Once I came to appreciate how nursing was a continuing part of the miracle of
conception and pregnancy, how could I not want to experience it? How many
miracles do we get to experience in our lives? I am forever grateful to my
friend for suggesting this consultation. This meeting and my husband’s
encouragement were the key factors in my decision to nurse my first child.
Susan’s
story:
Breastfeeding has reinforced my belief that you’ve got to fight for what you
want. I don’t think we were given great advice at the hospital. No one ever
mentioned cup feeding, or eye-droppers - it was either give him your breast or
we give him a bottle. There was nothing else. And when I saw my ob-gyn at six
weeks and told her what was going on with breastfeeding, she kind of shrugged
her shoulders and said, “Oh yeah, I had trouble breastfeeding. It’s really not
worth it at this point. Give him a bottle!” And this is a woman who has a
reputation for being more natural and into all this stuff that’s good for the
mother and the baby! I was shocked, really shocked.
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