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Educating Physicians about Breastfeeding : Building a Foundation. Lori Feldman-Winter, MD, MPH Associate Professor of Pediatrics Children’s Regional Hospital at Cooper UMDNJ-RWJMS. Disclosure.
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Educating Physicians about Breastfeeding: Building a Foundation Lori Feldman-Winter, MD, MPH Associate Professor of Pediatrics Children’s Regional Hospital at Cooper UMDNJ-RWJMS
Disclosure • I have no relevant financial relationships with the manufacturers(s) of any commercial products(s) and/or provider of commercial services discussed in this CME activity. • I do not intend to discuss an unapproved/investigative use of a commercial product/device in my presentation.
Outline • Breastfeeding Matters • Evidence that physicians need education • Why physicians matter in breastfeeding promotion • Promising strategies • What physicians can/should do
Learning Objective • Understand the critical importance of physicians in providing consistent and positive breastfeeding advocacy and support, and be familiar with initiatives in resident training
AOM 50% less EBF>3-6 months Atopic Dermatitis less 42% EBF>3 months Gastro less 64% with any BF vs. none LRTI and hospitalization less 72% with EBF>4 months Asthma less 40% for BF>3 months Obesity less 4-24% T1DM less 19-27% BF>3 months T2DM less 39% with any BF vs. none Cancer: ALL less 19% with BF>6 months AML less 15% with BF>6 months SIDS less 36% with any BF vs. none Breastfeeding Matters: Top 10AHRQ Evidence Based Review
History of Physicians’ Knowledge and Attitudes Freed GL Hollen BK Schanler RJ Graph data from theMother’s Survey, Ross Products Division of Abbott
Knowledge and Attitudes • Sometimes it is what we don’t say or are “too vague” in saying • Sometimes it’s not what we say… but what we do • give out formula company literature and portray bottle feeding as the norm in the office setting
Why Physicians matter? • Research has shown that that encouragement from health care providers is associated with breastfeeding initiation • Lu MC, Lange L, Slusser W, Hamilton J, Halfon N. Provider encouragement of breast-feeding: evidence from a national survey. Obstet Gynecol.2001; 97 :290 –295 • …and continuation • Taveras EM, Capra AM, Braveman PA, Jensvold NG, Escobar GJ, Lieu TA. Clinician support and psychosocial risk factors associated with breastfeeding discontinuation. Pediatrics.2003; 112 :108 –115
Pediatric clinician factor AOR CI p Predictors of Not Exclusively Breastfeeding at 12 Weeks, From Multivariate Models Among Mothers Who Were BF at 4 Weeks Recommend formula supplementation if infant is not gaining enough weight 3.2 (1.04–9.7) .04 Reported advice to mothers on breastfeeding duration is not very important 2.2 (1.2–3.9) .01 Does not recommend exclusive breastfeeding during the first month of life 2.1 (0.95–4.7) .07 Taveras E. et al. Opinions and Practices of Clinicians Associated With Continuation of Exclusive Breastfeeding. PEDIATRICS Vol. 113 No. 4 April 2004, pp. e283-e290
Why Pediatricians Matter? • Specific practices and opinions of pediatricians were associated with the likelihood of continuation of exclusive breastfeeding • Clinicians who recommended formula supplementation or who do not think their advice is very important may be sending signals that exclusive breastfeeding is not something that mothers should value highly • In addition, many clinicians do not feel confident in their skills to support breastfeeding and may have limited time to address the issue during preventive visits. Taveras E. et al. Opinions and Practices of Clinicians Associated With Continuation of Exclusive Breastfeeding. PEDIATRICS Vol. 113 No. 4 April 2004, pp. e283-e290
Why Physicians Matter? Labarere J. et al. Pediatrics. Feb 2005;115(2):e139-e146
Promising Strategies • AAP BPPOP III Residency Curriculum • Includes three major sections: • Advocacy • Clinical Management • Delivering Culturally Competent Breastfeeding Care 7 test sites; 7 comparison sites
Outcome Measures • Knowledge: mean difference in scores on posttest minus pretest • Confidence: Two measures of confidence-promotion of breastfeeding and management of problems; Scale 1 – 5 (1 = Not At All Confident, 5 = Very Confident) • Practice Patterns: mean difference scale 1 – 4 (1 = Never, 2 = Once or Twice, 3 = Three or Four times, and 4 = Greater than 5 times) for 10 items of practice “How many times did you ________ in the past 6 months?”
Breastfeeding Rates Significant difference (p<.001) in breastfeeding rates pre- to post- for the comparison sites vs. test sites. Although both improved, the test sites improved significantly more. The main difference was seen in Caucasians and Hispanics, and African Americans approached significance, but other groups numbers were too small in numbers to determine.
Additional BPPOP III Activities • Development of Poster for Physicians’ Offices • Teleconferences: • First Teleconference – • Breastfeeding Basics: Generalist to Generalist presented by Sharon Mass, MD (OB), Jenny Thomas, MD (Ped), and Margreete Johnston, MD (Ped) – 58 participants. • Second Teleconference – • Breastfeeding Promotion Tailored to the Needs of a Diverse Society presented by Lori Feldman-Winter, MD (Ped), MaryAnn O’Hara, MD (FP), and Michal Young (Ped) – 35 participants.
Poster: Breastfeeding is the First Immunization • Created in collaboration with the AAP Section on Breastfeeding and the Childhood Immunization Support Program, a program funded by the CDC. • Available during World Breastfeeding Week to physicians, hospitals, WIC sites, and public health agencies.
What Physicians Can/Should Do • Learn: Attend a workshops on breastfeeding management: AAP, NCE, ABM, LLL Physicians’ Seminar; Use the physicians’ handbook (AAP/ACOG/AAFP) • See one do one teach one • Eliminate…formula company’s influence • Decorate…use breastfeeding posters with images of multiple cultures
See one… do one… teach one Photo courtesy of Jane Morton, MD