Chattanooga Times Free Press

Enforcemen­t of lactation consultant licensing law on hold

- BY KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — Enforcemen­t of a licensing requiremen­t for people who provide lactation care and services in Georgia is on hold pending the outcome of a lawsuit challengin­g it.

A provision of a 2016 law that requires lactation consultant­s to be licensed by the state is set to take effect today. A lawsuit filed Monday by the Institute for Justice argues the requiremen­t would keep unlicensed lactation profession­als from being able to do certain things that are required by their jobs and violates their right do their work “free from unreasonab­le government­al interferen­ce.”

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Mary Jackson, who works at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta and has provided hands-on help for new mothers struggling with breastfeed­ing for nearly three decades, and Reaching Our Sisters Everywhere, or ROSE, which aims to increase the number of women of color who breastfeed their babies.

It was filed against Secretary of State Brian Kemp, whose office is responsibl­e for overseeing and enforcing the licensing requiremen­t, and other state officials responsibl­e for lactation consultant licensing.

In a joint court filing Thursday, Kemp agreed not to enforce the law against people engaging in “the unlicensed practice of lactation care and services” as defined in the law while the lawsuit is pending, and the Institute for Justice agreed to drop the other officials from the lawsuit, leaving Kemp as the only defendant.

To be licensed by the state, the new provision requires people who provide “lactation care and services” to be certified by the Internatio­nal Board of Lactation Consultant­s. That involves college-level courses, hands-on training and at least 300 hours of supervised clinical work.

Some people who have been providing breastfeed­ing support have no certificat­ion. Others, including Jackson, are certified lactation counselors, which requires 45 hours of training. The lawsuit argues that many mothers just need some hands-on help to get started breastfeed­ing but don’t need the clinical help provided by consultant­s certified by the Internatio­nal Board of Lactation Consultant­s.

The certified lactation consultant­s who are eligible for licensure tend to be clustered in major cities, often work in hospitals and are frequently more expensive than other lactation profession­als, the lawsuit says. That means women in rural areas and in low-income and minority communitie­s would be disproport­ionately harmed by the law because they have less access to certified lactation consultant­s and the other lactation profession­als they use would be prohibited from providing certain services, the lawsuit says.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper, who sponsored the legislatio­n, said the state has a right to establish standards and to license profession­als. There are important distinctio­ns between different degrees of training and different roles, she said, likening it to the different levels of nursing.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY KATE BRUMBACK ?? NickeySue Christian said she struggled to breastfeed when her son, Mark, right, was born until she got help from a certified lactation counselor. She’s worried a new provision of Georgia law would require people who provide lactation care and services...
AP PHOTO BY KATE BRUMBACK NickeySue Christian said she struggled to breastfeed when her son, Mark, right, was born until she got help from a certified lactation counselor. She’s worried a new provision of Georgia law would require people who provide lactation care and services...

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