母乳喂养生病的孩子;社交媒体能影响实践吗?

Dominique Mylod
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引用次数: 12

摘要

母乳是婴儿的最佳营养。世界卫生组织关于婴儿应至少纯母乳喂养6个月的建议(Kramer & Kakuma, 2001年)在其第二个十年中保持不变(Kramer & Kakuma, 2014年),工业化国家在儿童病房和部门促进和护理母乳喂养的连续政策和指导方针中承认了这一点。众所周知,母乳在预防晚年疾病发作方面具有保护作用,这对任何生病的婴儿都特别重要,但以海伦·卡尔弗特(Helen Calvert)的Twitter活动@heartmummy#医院母乳喂养为代表的用户声音将服务用户和专业人士的声音联合起来,呼吁在儿科护理中改善母乳喂养支持。虽然工业化国家的母乳喂养率在头6周内显著下降,但患有心脏病的母乳喂养婴儿受益于更好的氧饱和度、更快的体重增加和更短的住院时间。身体不适的婴儿最需要母乳的好处。然而,家庭和工作人员克服了开始和维持母乳喂养的物理障碍,包括缺乏空间、隐私和母婴分离。许多妇女有动力进行母乳喂养或哺乳,但不愿向保健专业人员寻求帮助和建议。尽管有强有力的证据和健全的指导方针和政策,但儿童保健专业人员的母乳喂养知识和经验往往不足,使他们无法支持家庭。虽然@heartmummy#医院母乳喂养凸显了这一问题,但儿童健康战略需要对年轻人的长期健康进行投资,提高工作人员的技能,并将母乳喂养作为一项核心治疗干预措施加以重视。哺乳顾问可以提供培训,传播良好做法,并解决母乳喂养家庭的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Breast feeding a sick child; can social media influence practice?

Breast milk represents optimum infant nutrition. The World Health Organization's recommendation that babies should be exclusively breastfed for a minimum of 6 months (Kramer & Kakuma, 2001) remains unchanged in its second decade (Kramer & Kakuma, 2014), which is acknowledged in industrialized countries by successive policies and guidelines for the promotion and care of breastfeeding in children's wards and departments. The known protective influence of breast milk in preventing the onset of disease in later life is of particular import for any sick infant, but the user voice as represented by Helen Calvert's Twitter campaign @heartmummy#hospitalbreastfeeding has united service user and professional voices to call for improved breastfeeding support in pediatric care. Although breastfeeding rates in industrialized countries drop markedly in the first 6 weeks, breastfed babies with cardiac conditions benefit from better oxygen saturations, faster weight gain, and shorter hospital stays. Unwell babies are most in need of the benefits of breast milk. However, families and staff overcome physical barriers to the initiation and maintenance of breastfeeding, including lack of space, privacy, and separation of the maternal-infant dyad. Many women are motivated to breastfeed or express milk but are reluctant to approach health professionals for help and advice. Despite robust evidence and sound guidelines and policies, breastfeeding knowledge and experience amongst Child Health professionals is often inadequate and leaves them unable to support families. While @heartmummy#hospitalbreastfeeding highlights the issue, Child Health strategy needs investment in young people's long term health by increasing staff skills and focusing on breastfeeding as a core therapeutic intervention. Lactation Consultants could offer training, disseminate good practice, and address the needs of breastfeeding families.

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