Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, Australia.
Matern Child Nutr. 2020 Oct;16(4):e13033. doi: 10.1111/mcn.13033. Epub 2020 Jul 29.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has provided detailed guidance on the care of infants of women who are persons under investigation (PUI) or confirmed to have COVID-19. The guidance supports immediate post-partum mother-infant contact and breastfeeding with appropriate respiratory precautions. Although many countries have followed WHO guidance, others have implemented infection prevention and control (IPC) policies that impose varying levels of post-partum separation and discourage or prohibit breastfeeding or provision of expressed breast milk. These policies aim to protect infants from the potential harm of infection from their mothers, yet they may fail to fully account for the impact of separation. Global COVID-19 data are suggestive of potentially lower susceptibility and a typically milder course of disease among children, although the potential for severe disease in infancy remains. Separation causes cumulative harms, including disrupting breastfeeding and limiting its protection against infectious disease, which has disproportionate impacts on vulnerable infants. Separation also presumes the replaceability of breastfeeding-a risk that is magnified in emergencies. Moreover, separation does not ensure lower viral exposure during hospitalizations and post-discharge, and contributes to the burden on overwhelmed health systems. Finally, separation magnifies maternal health consequences of insufficient breastfeeding and compounds trauma in communities who have experienced long-standing inequities and violence, including family separation. Taken together, separating PUI/confirmed SARS-CoV-2-positive mothers and their infants may lead to excess preventable illnesses and deaths among infants and women around the world. Health services must consider the short-andlong-term impacts of separating mothers and infants in their policies.
世界卫生组织(WHO)为感染新冠病毒的孕妇或确诊患者的婴儿护理提供了详细指导。该指导支持母婴立即进行产后接触,并在适当的呼吸防护措施下进行母乳喂养。尽管许多国家都遵循了世卫组织的指导意见,但其他国家也实施了感染预防和控制(IPC)政策,对母婴进行不同程度的产后隔离,并劝阻或禁止母乳喂养或提供母乳。这些政策旨在保护婴儿免受母亲感染的潜在危害,但可能没有充分考虑到隔离的影响。全球 COVID-19 数据表明,儿童的感染易感性可能较低,且疾病通常较轻,但婴儿仍有患重病的可能。母婴分离会造成累积性伤害,包括破坏母乳喂养并限制其对传染病的保护,这对脆弱的婴儿产生了不成比例的影响。母婴分离还假定母乳喂养是可替代的,这在紧急情况下会增加风险。此外,分离并不能确保婴儿在住院和出院后接触病毒的风险降低,而且还会加重不堪重负的卫生系统的负担。最后,母婴分离会放大因母乳喂养不足对母亲健康造成的影响,并加剧长期存在不平等和暴力的社区的创伤,包括家庭分离。总之,将疑似感染或确诊的新冠病毒的母亲及其婴儿分开,可能会导致全球婴儿和妇女出现不必要的疾病和死亡。卫生服务部门必须在其政策中考虑到母婴分离的短期和长期影响。