Grizzard Tarayn A, Bartick Melissa, Nikolov Margaret, Griffin Beth Ann, Lee Kimberly G
Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, 260 Longwood Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2006 May;10(3):247-63. doi: 10.1007/s10995-005-0065-8. Epub 2006 Feb 23.
Hospital policies and practices related to breastfeeding may have long-term health effects. The Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding (WHO/UNICEF) provide an evidence-based standard, which may be used to assess individual hospitals. We assessed implementation, and factors related to implementation, of the Ten Steps in Massachusetts hospitals.
We surveyed postpartum nurse managers at 43 (88%) of the 49 Massachusetts maternity hospitals by telephone. Survey items characterized hospital policies, breastfeeding education, and support practices. We classified hospital implementation of the Ten Steps as high, moderately high, partial, or low and used Massachusetts Department of Public Health hospital data to analyze factors related to implementation.
Levels of implementation of the Ten Steps ranged from high to partial. Overall, we classified implementation of 2% of hospitals as high, 58% moderately high, 40% partial, and 0% as low. Hospitals with high/moderately high levels of implementation significantly differed from hospitals with partial implementation with respect to pacifier usage (p=0.0017) and postpartum breastfeeding instruction (p=0.0001). Requirement of a physician order for formula was a statistically significant (p=0.02) predictor of Step 1 implementation but did not reach significance (p=0.14) overall. Acceptance of free formula was significantly associated (p=0.03) with overall Ten Steps implementation.
Rates of self-reported implementation of the Ten Steps are relatively high in Massachusetts. Step 1 implementation is significantly associated with formula availability, and overall implementation with acceptance of free formula. Continued assessment is needed to confirm these results in larger samples and to examine the relationship of implementation of individual steps, breastfeeding rates, and health outcomes.
医院与母乳喂养相关的政策和做法可能会产生长期健康影响。成功母乳喂养十项措施(世界卫生组织/联合国儿童基金会)提供了一个基于证据的标准,可用于评估各个医院。我们评估了马萨诸塞州各医院十项措施的实施情况以及与实施相关的因素。
我们通过电话对马萨诸塞州49家产科医院中的43家(88%)的产后护士经理进行了调查。调查项目描述了医院政策、母乳喂养教育和支持措施。我们将医院对十项措施的实施情况分为高、中高、部分实施或低,并使用马萨诸塞州公共卫生部的医院数据来分析与实施相关的因素。
十项措施的实施水平从高到部分实施不等。总体而言,我们将2%的医院实施情况分类为高,58%为中高,40%为部分实施,0%为低。实施水平高/中高的医院与部分实施的医院在安抚奶嘴使用(p = 0.0017)和产后母乳喂养指导(p = 0.0001)方面存在显著差异。配方奶需医生开具医嘱是第一步实施的统计学显著预测因素(p = 0.02),但总体上未达到显著水平(p = 0.14)。接受免费配方奶与十项措施的总体实施显著相关(p = 0.03)。
在马萨诸塞州,自我报告的十项措施实施率相对较高。第一步的实施与配方奶的可获得性显著相关,总体实施与接受免费配方奶相关。需要继续进行评估,以在更大样本中证实这些结果,并研究各个步骤的实施、母乳喂养率和健康结果之间的关系。