Patty’s Blog: “” posts
Birth Practices Affect Breastfeeding
WHO and UNICEF recommend that to maximize the establishment of successful breastfeeding, women in labor, regardless of birth setting, should have access to the following practices:
- Care that is sensitive and responsive to the specific beliefs, values, and customs of the mother’s culture, ethnicity and religion;
- Birth companions of her choice who provide emotional and physical support throughout labor and delivery;
- The freedom to walk, move about, and assume the positions of her choice during labor;
- Care by staff trained in non-drug methods of pain relief and who do not promote the use of analgesic or anesthetic drugs unless required by a medical condition;
- Care that minimizes routine practices and procedures that are not supported by scientific evidence including withholding nourishment, early rupture of membranes, routine use of IVs, routine electronic fetal monitoring, episiotomy, and instrumental delivery;
- Care that minimizes invasive procedures such as unnecessary acceleration or induction of labor and medically unnecessary cesarean sections.
Our bi-weekly Birth & Parenting News blog highlights the latest news items, research results, consumer alerts, and legislative action alerts of interest to expectant and new parents and the professionals who work them.
Are you a breastfeeding mom who works?
The United States Breastfeeding Committee website lists existing federal and state legislation regarding the right to breastfeed and workplace support for working mothers.
Our bi-weekly Birth & Parenting News blog highlights the latest news items, research results, consumer alerts, and legislative action alerts of interest to expectant and new parents and the professionals who work them.
Powerhouse Nutrients for Pregnancy and Lactation
Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies is offering a free webinar, Powerhouse Nutrients for Pregnancy and Lactation, featuring Mary Harris who shares the most recent evidence on the role of major nutrients in optimal pregnancy outcomes and infant neurocognitive development. Focusing on folic acid, vitamin D, and omega-3 DHA, Dr. Harris reviews the role of major nutrients in pregnancy in: (1) preventing preterm delivery and (2) optimizing maternal weight gain and infant birth weight. In addition, she discusses the most appropriate level of folic acid intake (from supplements and food) for pregnant women; identifies the benefits of omega-3 DHA intake upon infant visual, social, cognitive, and psychomotor development; and shares the best food sources of omega-3′s, along with safe seafood consumption during pregnancy.
Our bi-weekly Birth & Parenting News blog highlights the latest news items, research results, consumer alerts, and legislative action alerts of interest to expectant and new parents and the professionals who work them. From Center for the Childbearing Year.
