| Literature DB >> 31921327 |
Christina Soti-Ulberg1, Amber Hromi-Fiedler2, Nicola L Hawley2, Take Naseri1, Analosa Manuele-Magele1, John Ah-Ching1, Rafael Pérez-Escamilla2.
Abstract
Background: Breastfeeding is a critical, evidence-based intervention that addresses malnutrition, improves early childhood development outcomes, and influences long-term maternal and infant health by reducing the non-communicable disease risk. Scaling up breastfeeding is an indisputably strong action countries can take to prevent suboptimal maternal and infant health outcomes. The Becoming Breastfeeding Friendly (BBF) initiative assists countries with scaling up breastfeeding policy and programs. BBF has been successfully implemented within Latin America, Africa, Europe and South-East Asian regions. This study assessed its application in Samoa.Entities:
Keywords: Becoming Breastfeeding Friendly; Breastfeeding; Samoa; Scaling up
Year: 2020 PMID: 31921327 PMCID: PMC6945417 DOI: 10.1186/s13006-019-0245-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Breastfeed J ISSN: 1746-4358 Impact factor: 3.461
Fig. 1The final eight gear scores for the Becoming Breastfeeding Friendly initiative in Samoa
BBF gear score, gear strength, gaps and recommendations. Samoa, 2018
| Gear | Gear Score | Gear Strength | Gaps | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advocacy | 1.5 | Moderate | • Lack of any high-level advocates or influential individuals who have taken on breastfeeding as a cause that they are promoting • Lack of a formal National Breastfeeding Advocacy Strategy policy but some components are included in the National Nutrition Strategy (that was developed based on existing data and has indicators of effectiveness) • There is a multisectoral breastfeeding committee that has national coverage but the strengths of the political commitment are not clear or documented | • Develop an evidence-based National Breastfeeding Advocacy Strategy • Integrate breastfeeding into other health events during the year • Seek a champion on breastfeeding to become a role model to advocate for breastfeeding |
| Political Will | 2.0 | Moderate | • Expressed political commitment is only showcased during annual events; Samoan culture/traditional beliefs and values as well as the political environment (e.g. Samoan political sphere is male dominate and older) may explain why there is little, consistent public official support • Limited breastfeeding awareness at the political level | • Strengthen commitment to breastfeeding action at the political level • Improve government’s efforts towards promoting an enabling environment for breastfeeding at a national level • Government to be more proactive in creating awareness of legislations and policies affecting female employees |
| Legislation & Policy | 1.8 | Moderate | • Lack of a national breastfeeding policy, but breastfeeding is integrated into a National Health services policy • No approval yet to pass the law to enforce penalties for breaching the Code • Maternity protection laws are largely compliant with the Maternity Protection Convention 2000, but it has not been ratified • Lack of legislation for workplace accommodations for breastfeeding | • Endorse and implement legislation on infant and young child feeding and the Code • Ratify Maternity Protection Convention 2000 • Have legislation that promotes as upportive worksite for breastfeeding women • Develop and endorse a National Breastfeeding Policy • Have a formal mechanism for maternity entitlement for all working women |
| Funding & Resources | 0.5 | Weak | • Lack of a national budget line for breastfeeding • Lack of adequate funding and human resources for breastfeeding; • Lack of a national breastfeeding coordinator that is funded full time to primarily work on breastfeeding promotion • Limited formal mechanism by which maternity entitlements are funded | • Create a national budget line for breastfeeding promotion activities. • Have a national coordinator position for breastfeeding for lactation counselors/ master trainers and BFHI/Ten Steps |
| Training & Program Delivery | 1.8 | Moderate | • Lack of standard breastfeeding training in preservice medical, nursing, and midwife curricula • Limited number of trainers - there are two “master trainers” with only 60% of staff trained in the National Health Service with the 20 h World Health Organization breastfeeding training program • Need online breastfeeding courses/topics that are endorsed • Need for continue education credit courses for nurses, doctors, and midwives • BFHI audit reports are internal and not all reports are published online (such as on the MOH website) • Lack of any lactation consult/specialist supervisors | • Certification of the breastfeeding counseling training program by the Samoa Qualification Attorney (SQA) and MOH • Pre-service curriculum should include breastfeeding and be uniform for all preservice provider education including nursing and medicine • Have an annual breastfeeding training and regular in-service training for new staff in the maternity services |
| Promotion | 2.0 | Moderate | • Lack of a national breastfeeding promotion strategy, but rely on the National Nutrition policy • Limitations with consistent data collection and the coordination/awareness of various programs to support breastfeeding. Every organization is doing something for, breastfeeding but there is lack of coordination | • Review outdated National Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) Strategy and incorporate apromotion strategy for breastfeeding • National IYCF has a set annual plan for activities to be in place |
| Research & Evaluation | 1.8 | Moderate | • MOH data is collected yearly (including annual audited BFHI reports) but it is not publicly available • Lactation counseling happens at individual basis but no monitoring system is in place | • Publish data on breastfeeding practices online via Ministry of Health website • Establish an annual population-based surveillance or monitoring system to track breastfeeding /lactation counselling and support • Strengthen implementation of routine data collection on breastfeeding during clinical visits |
| Coordination, Goals & Monitoring | 1.7 | Moderate | • Samoa has a National Multisectoral Committee on Breastfeeding with team members from MCIL, MNRE, MOH, NHS, PSC, MPE, SFH, and SRC but there is no workplan • There is insufficient information online and data are disaggregated. No e-health system is available to evaluate the breastfeeding program progress | • Conduct an Annual National Symposium for Breastfeeding • Create support network and service for breastfeeding free short message service (SMS) helpline. |