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Adriano Cattaneo a Unit for Health Services Research and
International Cooperation, Istituto per l'Infanzia, Via dell'Istria
65/1, 34137 Trieste, Italy, b Centre for the Evaluation of
Effectiveness and Appropriateness of Health Care (CEVEAS), Modena,
Italy
Correspondence to: A Cattaneo cattaneo{at}burlo.trieste.it
Problem:
Breastfeeding rates and related hospital
practices need improvement in Italy and elsewhere. Training of staff is necessary, but its effectiveness needs assessment.
Context:
Eight hospitals in different regions of Italy.
Design:
Controlled, non-randomised study. Data
collected in three phases. Training after the first phase in group 1 hospitals and after the second phase in group 2.
Strategies for change:
Training of trainers and
subsequent training of health workers with a slightly adapted version
of the 18 hour Unicef course on breastfeeding management and promotion.
Key measures for improvement:
Hospital practices,
knowledge of 571 health workers, and breastfeeding rates at discharge,
three, and six months in 2669 mother and baby pairs.
Effects of change:
After training hospitals improved
their compliance with the "ten steps to successful breast feeding,"
from an average of 2.4 steps at phase one to 7.7 at phase three.
Knowledge scores of health professionals increased from 0.41 to 0.72 in
group 1 (training after phase one) and from 0.53 to 0.75 in group 2 (after phase two). The rate of exclusive breast feeding at discharge increased significantly after training: 41% to 77% in group 1 and
23% to 73% in group 2, as did the rates of full (exclusive plus
predominant) breast feeding at three months (37% to 50% in group
1 v 40% to 59% in group 2) and any breast feeding at six months (43% to 62% in group 1 v 41% to 64% in group 2).
Lessons learnt:
Training for at least three days with
a course including practical sessions and counselling skills is
effective in changing hospital practices, knowledge of health workers,
and breastfeeding rates.
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