The study implemented the Child Friendly Hospital Initiative for neonatal units (Neo-BFHI) in order to assist premature infants in hospitals throughout the five regions of Brazil. It measured the impacts of the intervention with respect to two indicators: exclusive breastfeeding incidence among premature babies and adherence to measures by health professionals.
The experiment was conducted in three phases and in nine hospitals located throughout Brazil (north, northeast, central west, southeast and south). Five hospitals received the Neo-BFHI intervention and four did not (control). In the first phase, the team collected data on breastfeeding habits of 488 mothers with premature babies and on the practices to encourage breastfeeding through interviews with 365 professionals and 233 mothers, as well as 27 observational visits. In the second phase, the researchers implemented Neo-BFHI based on Knowledge Translation techniques, with the active participation of five multi-professional groups working at the intervention hospitals located in each region of the country. In the third phase, the team again collected data on breastfeeding habits of 495 mothers with premature babies and on the practices to encourage breastfeeding through interviews with 345 professionals and 198 mothers, as well as 21 observational visits. The impacts of the intervention were measured with respect to two indicators: exclusive breastfeeding among premature infants and adherence to measures by health professionals.
The intervention hospital in the southern region, in Londrina (PR), was the only one that significantly increased the rates of exclusive breastfeeding both at hospital discharge (from 29.8% to 84.4%) and in the first month in which the premature infant was home (from 27.3% to 77.1%). This hospital also had the largest increase in adherence to best practices, including the Ten Steps (from 35.5% to 78.5%), the Three Guiding Principles (from 47.8% to 95.8%) and the Code (from 62.5% to 87.5%). More than 500 health professionals were trained in these practices and 4,600 premature babies directly benefited from the project.
Neo-BFHI is an innovative strategy to expand conventional BFHI practices to promote, protect and support breastfeeding, taking into account the complexity of breastfeeding premature and critically ill babies. This is the first study in the world to collect data on the impact of this intervention on two indicators, utilizing interviews with mothers, managers and health professionals, document analysis and observation of the practice by external evaluators instead of information collected by the institutions. This makes the data much more reliable and accurate.
The low rates of breastfeeding among premature infants, an essential factor to promote the mother-child bond and protect them against infections and complications during their hospital stay. A study of 93 premature infants found that only 22.6% had been breastfed in the first hour of life.
In addition to trainings based on the best evidence, the implementation of Neo-BFHI incorporates a set of low-cost, high-impact measures, such as providing accommodation for the mother to stay beside the baby’s incubator in kangaroo care. As such, the guidelines of this expanded initiative for premature and sick babies could be incorporated as mandatory requirements to grant the title of Baby Friendly Hospital to institutions that serve this high-risk segment of the population throughout the country.
With a low cost and high impact, the 10 Steps intervention could be adopted by the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) and the World Health Organization (WHO) and recommended to member countries.
The team needs new funding to return to the five units that received the intervention in order to assess whether changes in the practices of professionals with respect to the promotion and protection of breastfeeding for premature infants have continued after one or two years. This will help the researchers identify what worked well in order to expand Neo-BFHI to other Brazilian neonatal units.
“In the beginning, it was difficult. Born at 25 weeks, it was hard for him to nurse. But, with the help of the study team and constant and daily dedication, I managed to breastfeed my baby for the first time.” The account above perfectly summarizes the difficulties of breastfeeding small and very low birth weight […]
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