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BECOMING BABY FRIENDLY IN AN ETHNICALLY DIVERSE HOSPITAL Dr Alison Spiro Specialist Health Visitor Making the Natural Normal Conference Feb 21 st 2014

Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

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Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital. Dr Alison Spiro Specialist Health Visitor Making the Natural Normal Conference Feb 21 st 2014. Themes. Background Cultural diversity Meanings of breastfeeding Action planning Training Impact of training Communication skills - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

BECOMING BABY FRIENDLY IN AN ETHNICALLY DIVERSE HOSPITAL

Dr Alison SpiroSpecialist Health Visitor

Making the Natural Normal Conference Feb 21st 2014

Page 2: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

THEMES

• Background• Cultural diversity• Meanings of breastfeeding • Action planning• Training• Impact of training• Communication skills• Gaining confidence in professional practice• Peer support at Northwick Park• Antenatal education-Saturday workshops• Neonatal Unit• Improvements in breastfeeding rates

Page 3: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

BACKGROUND SITUATION IN 2005

• Low initiation rates (67%)• Exclusive breastfeeding rates low (32% at 6 weeks)• Mothers and professionals lacking confidence in

supporting exclusive breastfeeding• Formula milk was visible and available on the

wards• Culturally formula seen by mothers as normal in the

UK and a sign of wealth and upward social mobility• Very little joint working between midwives and

health visitors.• Mothers being given conflicting advice• Gill Lee had the vision that Northwick Park Hospital

could become Baby Friendly and supported me to lead

Page 4: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

CULTURAL DIVERSITY

• 90% of mothers who deliver at Northwick Park Hospital come from ethnic minority groups

• Most common ethnicity is South Asian• Harrow and Brent have largest Hindu

populations in the UK• Strong cultural imperative to breastfeed• Belief that cultural beliefs and

knowledge is transferred in breast milk• Influence of other women in household is

strong and hierarchy is observed• Joint households are ideal and older

women influence feeding decisions

Page 5: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

OTHER ETHNIC GROUPS

• African mostly Somali • Strong belief in breastfeeding but mix feed• Lack of confidence in colostrum• Focus groups showed that many do not think

exclusive breastfeeding is adequate• Intervention: Somali peer supporter meet

pregnant women and explain the benefits and offer support post birth

• Eastern European –Polish, Romanian • Strong beliefs in breastfeeding but may

supplement with teas and use pacifiers

Page 6: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

ACTION PLANNING

• Harrow LAA grant in 2006 under ‘Every Child Matters’

• UNICEF Baby Friendly Action planning jointly with Harrow

• Training for health visitors had started in Harrow• Secondment to Northwick Park Hospital• UNICEF x7 facilitated 3-day training for midwives and

health visitors• Peer support training started in 2005• Support groups expanded in the community• Brent started a Breastfeeding Strategy Group and

began peer support training in 2006 and appointed an Infant Feeding Coordinator

Page 7: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

ANTENATAL CONVERSATIONS

• Midwives discuss Breastfeeding at every contact

• Bump to Breastfeeding DVD-custom made-used with discussion at 28 weeks

• Invitation to Saturday workshops in notes-popular 2x monthly- 20-30 attendees with partners or family members

• Targeted antenatal classes- Somali, teenagers, multiple births- peer supporters –Halimo, Julie and Kathryn

• Hospital antenatal classes strong focus on breastfeeding

• Community classes led by community midwives and peer supporters

Page 8: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

BREASTFEEDING TRAINING

• Multi-disciplinary-midwives, doctors, health visitors, maternity assistants, neonatal nurses, peer supporters

• Initially UNICEF facilitated• In-house 2-day • Informal sharing of experiences• Time-lines and attitudes explored• Communication skills-listening exercises and

role play• Hearing the mother’s story• Practical helping strategies through scenarios • Challenging situations-emotional and

physical

Page 9: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

THE TEAM!

Page 10: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

IMPACT OF TRAINING

• Awareness of cultural beliefs and breastfeeding globally

• Knowledge of the evidence-base of health benefits

• Anatomy and physiology of the breast and how a baby latches and gets good milk transfer

• Emotional support and communication skills• Increased self awareness of own attitudes • Challenging breastfeeding situations and how

to ask for help • Result: increase in confidence -midwives asked

for formula milk to be removed from the wards after one training course

• Corina and I have worked as a harmonious team!

Page 11: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

BREASTFEEDING SUPPORT IN THE NEONATAL UNIT

• Small Wonders- Best Beginnings-pilot site• Breastfeeding Team established • Aine supports mothers and babies on the unit• Paediatric staff see breastfeeding as a key priority • Peer supporters - Rachel and Zeena and Tamsin • Aine now leads the staff training• Kangaroo care is integrated into routine care plans• Julie –Peer Support Co-ordinator for Harrow, joined the

Transitional Care Team in Jan 2014 • Aim: to promote exclusive breastfeeding on discharge

Page 12: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

GAINING CONFIDENCE IN CLINICAL PRACTICE

• Applying UNICEF 10 steps to the clinical setting

• Skin-to-skin for all babies including in theatre after caesarean section

• Policies underpin practice and support exclusive breastfeeding- infant feeding, reluctant feeders’, prevention of excessive weight loss, hypoglycaemia

• Work with staff and parents to recognise effective milk transfer

• Observe and facilitate staff supporting mothers

• Work with staff to encourage effective communication skills

• Results: confident staff who instil confidence in parents

Page 13: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

PEER SUPPORT IN NORTHWICK PARK HOSPITAL

• Brent employed and Harrow voluntary

• Mother-to-mother support on the wards

• Empathy easier

• Belief in breastfeeding- positive body language and attitude

• Supporting breastfeeding skills

• Self-aware

• Communication skills

• Continuity and referral for community support

• Assist with teaching antenatal hand expressing

Page 14: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

PEER SUPPORT IN THE COMMUNITY

Page 15: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

HARROW BABY FRIENDLY IN 2012

Page 16: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

IMPROVEMENT IN BREASTFEEDING RATES

0102030405060708090100

2005 2009 2013

InitiationContinuationExclusive

Page 17: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

CONCLUSIONS

• Northwick Park Hospital’s midwives, maternity assistants, doctors,nurses and nursery nurses can be proud of the breastfeeding support they give parents

• Changes in practice should be sustainable now underpinned by policies

• Breastfeeding training needs to continue to address staff attitudes and communication skills

• Awareness of cultural practices essential

Page 18: Becoming Baby Friendly in an Ethnically Diverse Hospital

VISION: ALL MOTHERS RECEIVE HIGH QUALITY SUPPORT WITH FEEDING THEIR BABIES