分娩医院主动管理哺乳以确保长期产奶和可持续母乳喂养。

Diane L Spatz, Salomé Álvarez Rodríguez, Sarah Benjilany, Barbara Finderle, Aleyd von Gartzen, Ann Yates, Jessica Brumley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在科学文献中,那些有可能无法获得全乳供应的个体经常被忽视。现有的指导可以帮助经历生理性分娩和分娩的健康个体建立充足的乳汁供应,并且对哺乳的父母有强有力的建议,以确保这些新生儿可以接受人乳。文献中缺少临床实践指南,这些指南涉及先前存在的健康状况、妊娠、分娩或新生儿相关的次优泌乳风险因素。这可能包括影响分泌激活的风险因素,或新生儿可能无法有效地附着和哺乳,以提供达到满乳量所需的刺激和清除。分泌激活只能在新生儿和胎盘出生后发生,在母乳喂养的头几周建立奶量。认识到这一差距,在过去的2年里,一个由哺乳护理博士科学家领导的国际助产士小组进行了广泛的文献综述,以确定可能破坏正常生理性哺乳的最重要危险因素。我们的小组试图建立主动的哺乳管理策略,以确保长期的产奶量。我们制定了一个循证的围产期母乳喂养操作计划以及临床路径,以指导卫生保健专业人员对存在风险的家庭进行评估、护理和必要的教育。我们的目标是让助产士和其他卫生保健专业人员将围产期操作母乳喂养计划整合到实践中,并使用这些途径来确保(1)及时有效地激活分泌,(2)根据个人情况和条件建立尽可能强大的母乳供应,(3)更多的新生儿获得更多的母乳,(4)更多的家庭实现他们的个人母乳喂养目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Proactive Management of Lactation in the Birth Hospital to Ensure Long-Term Milk Production and Sustainable Breastfeeding.

Individuals who are at risk of not achieving a full milk supply are often overlooked in scientific literature. There is available guidance to help establish an adequate milk supply for healthy individuals experiencing a physiologic labor and birth, and there are robust recommendations for the lactating parents of small, sick, and preterm newborns to ensure that these newborns can receive human milk. Missing from the literature are clinical practice guidelines that address the preexisting health, pregnancy, birth, or newborn-related risk factors for suboptimal lactation. This can include risk factors that impact secretory activation or newborns who may not attach and suckle effectively to provide the stimulation and removal necessary to reach full milk volume. Secretory activation can only occur after the birth of the newborn and the placenta, with milk volume being established during the first weeks of breastfeeding. Recognizing this gap, over the past 2 years, an international group of midwives led by a doctoral nurse scientist in lactation conducted an extensive literature review to identify the most significant risk factors that can disrupt normal physiologic lactation. Our group sought to establish proactive lactation management strategies to ensure long-term milk production. We developed an evidence-based perinatal operational breastfeeding plan alongside clinical pathways to guide health care professionals in assessment, care, and necessary education for families who present with risk. Our goal is for midwives and other health care professionals to integrate the perinatal operational breastfeeding plan into practice and use these pathways to ensure (1) timely and effective secretory activation, (2) building a milk supply as robust as feasible for personal situations and conditions, (3) more newborns receiving more human milk and (4) more families achieving their personal breastfeeding goals.

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