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A Pilot Study to Increase Breastfeeding Rates in a WIC Population

A Pilot Study to Increase Breastfeeding Rates in a WIC Population. Mary Sammer, MS, RD Nutrition Services/WIC Director North County Health Services San Marcos, California. WIC Refresher.

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A Pilot Study to Increase Breastfeeding Rates in a WIC Population

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  1. A Pilot Study to Increase Breastfeeding Rates in a WIC Population Mary Sammer, MS, RD Nutrition Services/WIC Director North County Health Services San Marcos, California

  2. WIC Refresher Federally funded supplemental nutrition program for low to moderate income women, infants and children Program Benefits • Nutrition & breastfeeding education • Vouchers for nutritious foods • Referrals for healthcare & other community programs

  3. Impact of WIC Program • California • WIC serves 1.3 million participants/month • Over 60% of infants born in California on WIC • National • WIC serves 8 million participants/month • 47% of infants born in US on WIC

  4. California WIC Program’s Breastfeeding Mission Statement “The California WIC Program promotes, supports and protects exclusive breastfeeding for approximately the first six months of life, and continued breastfeeding for at least the first year.”

  5. WIC Program Transitioning to Obesity Prevention • WIC strategically positioned to make a significant impact on childhood obesity • Strategic areas: Encouraging breastfeeding and appropriate infant/toddler feeding

  6. Rationale for Phone Intervention Study • To increase exclusive breastfeeding rate • Up to 50% of breastfed infants are weaned in the first 14 days postpartum (Loughlin, et al. 1985). • History of a some early phone contacts, though not routine. • Able to fund intervention with “Revitalization of Nutrition Services” money

  7. Study Preparation 1.Developed a Contact Form * • Early feeding assessment (weight, I/O, adequacy) • Provide targeted education • Anticipatory guidance (growth spurts, feeding cues) * Used ILCA’s “Evidence-Based Guidelines for Breastfeeding Management During the First 14 Days” www.ILCA.org 2.Staff Training • Well trained staff (CLE’s, in-house specialty training) • Specific training on interviewing with questionnaire 3.Random Assignment of Pregnant Moms to Intervention or Control group

  8. Hypotheses WIC mothers who receive an early postpartum phone call will be more likely to exclusively breastfeed, and breastfeed for a longer period of time than a control group. * * Measured by: Infant’s monthly WIC food prescription from birth to 1 year

  9. Our Study Population

  10. We Made a Difference! Statistically Significant at .05

  11. Infant’s Age at First Call

  12. Trend in % of Total Cohort Reporting Exclusive Breastfeeding

  13. What Happens Over Time:Trend in Breastfeeding for Intervention Group

  14. What Happens Over Time:Trend in Breastfeeding for Control Group

  15. Why it Worked Connected with Moms at their time of need • Beyond the normal WIC “clinic” services • Reached them at a “vulnerable” time in breastfeeding Moms had 100% of our attention, • Staff were given time to make call, build rapport with women • Intervention was individual and personal Well-trained staff • Asked open & closed ended questions that allowed us to educate, guide and reassure • WIC is a trusted resource

  16. Staff’s Report of Calls • Overwhelmingly POSITIVE • Newborn care concerns/questions • Confidence and reassurance of what’s “normal” with breastfed infant • Empower mothers not to give formula unnecessarily. • Common breastfeeding concerns • Referrals

  17. Conclusion • Early phone intervention helped the group of moms who wanted to breastfeed, but who may have quitprematurely for a variety of reasons • Using early postpartum phone intervention calls, we increased breastfeeding exclusivity and duration • Early postpartum phone intervention fits within the “scope of WIC services” • And could be easily replicated in other settings

  18. For Additional Information North County Health Services WIC Program 150 Valpreda Road, Suite 150 San Marcos, CA 92069 (760) 752-4324 Mary Sammer Lori Hill

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