Increasing support for breastfeeding patients
Image content: This image is available to view online.
View image online (https://assets.clevelandclinic.org/transform/0df85efa-4a71-41b3-bf02-49b8fb316617/23-CHP-3988710-CQD-Szugye-Breastfeeding-Medicine-Clinic_jpg)
23-CHP-3988710 CQD Szugye – Breastfeeding Medicine Clinic
National data show that 60% of mothers do not breastfeed for as long as they intended. The single largest influence of drop-off, which tends to occur around three months postpartum, is a lack of support.
Advertisement
Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy
Put simply, for mothers and gestational parents who choose to breastfeed, support must be consistent, easy to access and tailored to the patient population, explains Heidi Szugye, DO, IBCLC Medical Director of Breastfeeding Medicine Clinic. Dr. Szugye is dually board-certified in general pediatrics and pediatric hospital medicine and is an International Board-Certified Lactation Consultant.
Dr. Szugye and team launched the clinic in 2022 after observing a significant need to bolster breastfeeding services and resources for patients and providers across the health system. More than 12,000 live births occur annually in Cleveland Clinic birthing hospitals, making it the highest volume center in northeast Ohio. She says their goal is to work collaboratively with parent-infant dyads to add one more layer of support in conjunction with routine OB/GYN and pediatrician visits.
“These care teams are really good at identifying when something is not going well: mom’s having pain or baby is losing weight, for example,” she says. “Our job is to investigate the root of the problem, and not surprisingly it’s often multifactorial and requires more than a one-size-fits-all approach.”
The explosion of evidence and updated AAP recommendations on breastfeeding and use of human milk is defining a new era within the discipline, Dr. Szugye argues. And emerging scientific data juxtaposed with social media content that can be misleading or inaccurate has made it more complicated to navigate.
“Protocols and guidelines have expanded significantly in the last decade or so. This is shaping the practice in new ways and negating some of the long-held ‘truths’ about what works and what doesn’t,” she says.
Advertisement
The team developed a survey for 400 providers in pediatric primary care and hospital medicine, women’s health, medical and surgical breast services, and lactation services to assess what misconceptions providers taking care of breastfeeding patients are seeing in practice. Dr. Szugye comments below on the seven key takeaways this work revealed.
Advertisement
* InfantRisk.org and LactMed® are two free resources for clinicians.
Editor’s note: While the term breastfeeding is used in this article for the sake of simplicity, Dr. Szugye emphasizes use of gender-inclusive language, such as chest feeding and breastmilk feeding, when appropriate for the patient.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Try these moves to relieve butt pain and numbness
Systemic change needed to improve health outcomes for parents and children, say researchers
Rare genetic variant protected siblings against seizures and severe hypoglycemia
Movie has more positive impact than expected, says Head of Adolescent Medicine
Genetic changes are similar between some vascular anomalies and cancers
Expert panel advises a two-tier structure for surgical centers
Our new head of pediatric general and thoracic surgery shares his passion and vision
Basic understanding of condition and treatment is lacking