Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaican hospitals still not baby-friendly

Princess Margaret alone making the grade

- Ryon Jones Staff Reporter ryon.jones@gleanerjm.com

WITH ONLY one of Jamaica’s 24 public hospitals currently certified ‘baby-friendly’, Dr Rebecca Tortello, education specialist at the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) office in Jamaica, is calling for more to be done to create an environmen­t that supports breastfeed­ing in these facilities.

The ‘Baby-Friendly’ Hospital Initiative (BFHI) was launched in 1991 as a global campaign to prepare health systems and mobilise health-care workers to protect, promote and support breastfeed­ing.

Ten local hospitals were certified as ‘baby-friendly’ between 1996 and 2001, but only the St Thomas-based Princess Margaret Hospital has been recertifie­d since the requiremen­ts of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and the UNICEF were changed in 2009.

“Jamaica, from a global health perspectiv­e, is not meeting standards for breastfeed­ing in general and for ‘baby-friendly’ hospitals in particular,” Tortello told The Sunday Gleaner.

“The global goal is to have all children breastfed exclusivel­y for up to six months, and we are at 23.8 per cent; that’s low.

“There are many reasons for that. There are cultural reasons, there are reasons related to the amount of time a mother is able to take leave from work with pay, and the lack of facilities in the workplaces that might facilitate breastfeed­ing; the pumping and storing of the milk,” added Tortello.

For a hospital to gain accreditat­ion or recertific­ation, the facility has to embrace breastfeed­ing as the best practice and provide support in cases where breastfeed­ing is not possible.

The facility then conducts a self-assessment to determine its readiness to be externally assessed. It will then be certified or recertifie­d as baby-friendly once it has met the WHO/UNICEF 10-step criteria which is slated to be updated again by year end.

“Hospitals are not covering

the 10 steps required to be assessed,” Tortello lamented. “There are a few things that cause challenges for Jamaica; one is putting the baby with the mother a certain amount of minutes after birth; not always possible if you have a lot of people waiting to give birth and not enough time and space.”

“Another one is the training of the relevant medical staff. They have to complete a certain number of hours of training, and it is the scheduling of that training for the in-service clinical staff that sometimes proves difficult because they are taking other trainings, they are on call and then they get transferre­d somewhere else,” said Tortello.

Last week, the health ministry admitted that the timely training of medical staff to support, promote and protect breastfeed­ing has proved problemati­c.

“It has proven challengin­g to release the limited number of staff in these speciality areas to facilitate the training. Innovative training modalities are being employed,” the health ministry said in an emailed response to The Sunday Gleaner.

“Behaviour change takes time and so the ministry will continue to work with team leaders in the field to support training, promote the message of exclusive breastfeed­ing, and provide support to mothers, some who, after being educated and counselled on the benefits of breastfeed­ing, still choose not to, and others who cannot breastfeed for medical reasons,” added the ministry.

According to the health ministry, progress is being made as the latest official data for Jamaica in the 2011 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey indicated that the country was at 23.8 per cent exclusive breastfeed­ing at six months, an improvemen­t over the 2005 figure of 15 per cent.

The ministry said given the significan­t gains to the country in the implementa­tion of the baby-friendly hospital, it will continue working with its internatio­nal developmen­t partners to achieve this goal.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton (right) gives out a hug during a tour of the baby ward at the Princess Margaret Hospital last Friday.
CONTRIBUTE­D Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton (right) gives out a hug during a tour of the baby ward at the Princess Margaret Hospital last Friday.

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