Breastfeeding medicine : the official journal of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine
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This study assessed the degree to which women's intention to breastfeed prior to delivery translates to actual breastfeeding at hospital discharge and to investigate predictors of breastfeeding in a minority inner-city population. ⋯ In a minority inner-city population, only three in four women who intended to breastfeed prior to delivery were breastfeeding at hospital discharge. However, one in 10 women previously not intending to breastfeed did so. Strategies are needed to promote and strengthen women's intention to breastfeed and to help women's breastfeeding outcomes meet their intentions.
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Group B Streptococcus is a known cause of neonatal sepsis, being more common in the early period by maternal genital tract transmission and less so in the late neonatal period, ascribed to intestinal colonization or horizontal transmission. Although breastmilk transmission of Group B Streptococcus has rarely been reported in the past, most cases are of patients nursed on the mother's breast and less commonly in expressed breastmilk-fed infants. ⋯ The mother had presented with features of mastitis only during the second episode of sepsis and was then treated with oral antibiotics. The infant was fed on formula feeds after the second incidence and remained healthy, being discharged on a regular follow-up plan at 39 weeks corrected gestational age.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
An all-purpose nipple ointment versus lanolin in treating painful damaged nipples in breastfeeding women: a randomized controlled trial.
The negative outcomes associated with painful and damaged nipples have been widely documented in the breastfeeding literature. Numerous studies have been conducted evaluating topical preparations to treat nipple pain and damage with equivocal findings. No studies have evaluated the effectiveness of the increasingly popular all-purpose nipple ointment (APNO). The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the effect of the APNO versus lanolin on nipple pain among breastfeeding women with damaged nipples. ⋯ Results suggest that APNO is not superior to lanolin in treating painful, damaged nipples.
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Practice Guideline
ABM clinical protocol #15: analgesia and anesthesia for the breastfeeding mother, revised 2012.
A central goal of The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine is the development of clinical protocols for managing common medical problems that may impact breastfeeding success. These protocols serve only as guidelines for the care of breastfeeding mothers and infants and do not delineate an exclusive course of treatment or serve as standards of medical care. Variations in treatment may be appropriate according to the needs of an individual patient.