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Is getting rid of hospital nurseries unfair to new moms?

Is getting rid of hospital nurseries unfair to new moms? Rooming in policies are supposed to encourage breastfeeding, but in the hours following childbirth, many moms report feeling like their needs don t matter. When I had my first baby, it went well, all things considered. I was inducedat noon, gave birth 15 hours later in the wee hours of the morning, and my beautiful little boy went right on my chest, snuggling in and latching. I remember him just gazing up at me endlessly, taking in my face. Eventually we were moved to a private room, and I went to a breastfeeding lesson just down the hall, before the grandparents arrived to meet him. Through all the commotion, my blissed-out baby boy slept soundly, swaddled in the bassinet beside me, just like I’d imagined he would. 

About the mPINC Ten Steps Assessment Tool | Breastfeeding

Related Pages This is a tool to help assess a hospital’s implementation of each of the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding (Ten Steps). The tool identifies, or crosswalks, which items from CDC’s Maternity Practices in Infant Nutrition and Care (mPINC) survey align with each of the Ten Steps. The Ten Steps included in this tool are based on WHO’s and UNICEF’s . This tool is intended for use by state and local health departments, breastfeeding coalitions, and institutions and organizations working with hospitals on quality improvement in maternity care practices. It can also be used by hospitals to assess their own implementation of the Ten Steps and highlight areas of strength and needed improvement. This tool can help guide the implementation of maternity care practices and policies supportive of breastfeeding and identify and prioritize quality improvement efforts.

Three Decades Devoted to Brazil

March 10, 2021 Public Health in Brazil Rafael Pérez-Escamilla addresses the Brazilian Senate on household food insecurity and the Sustainable Development goals, Brasilia, 2016 Photo by Rafael Pérez-Escamilla Yale School of Public Health Professor Rafael Pérez-Escamilla, Ph.D., has worked around the world during a long and productive career to create better health and nutrition outcomes, with a focus on promoting breastfeeding, household food security, and combatting malnutrition, including obesity. He has spent a significant amount of time over the past 30 years in South America’s largest country, Brazil, where he has worked with colleagues to improve health outcomes and also help to train a cadre of health professionals. His work has taken him throughout Brazil and lead to many collaborations and partnerships that thrive to this day. His work in Brazil has touched many, and prompted the legendary Pelé to give him a signed soccer ball.

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