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Headline News
Employers Are Key to Overcoming U.S. Breastfeeding Dilemma
The U.S. government has launched a year-long national awareness campaign
consisting of public service announcements (PSAs) for print media, radio and televisionall
to help the American public better understand the significant health benefits that breastfeeding
provides to mothers and babies. LifeCare, Inc. CEO, Peter G. Burki, strongly supports this
endeavor and is calling upon the nation’s employers to step up their own breastfeeding awareness
efforts to help accomplish the campaign’s objectives.
“This campaign is creating the perfect opportunity for corporate America
to make two important contributions,” Burki states. “The first toward improving the health
of our country’s mothers and infants and the second toward enhancing the health and profitability
of their own organizations. Study after study has demonstrated the health and business benefits
of supporting breastfeeding in the workplace. So getting behind the momentum of this new
campaign should be a no-brainer for the business community.”
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LifeCare CD-ROM Takes Innovation Award in CQIA Competition
LifeCare's "Preparing to Breastfeed" course on CD-ROM
has been awarded a 2004 Silver Innovation award by The Connecticut Quality Improvement
Award Partnership (CQIA), which holds an annual competition to recognize excellence
in Connecticut organizations. LifeCare's CD-ROM was one of more than 100 entries
judged by 15 CQIA examiners.
Developed in conjunction with Cisco Systems, the worldwide leader
in networking for the Internet, the CD-ROM was designed to help organizations
deliver breastfeeding education to large, widely dispersed or highly mobile
employee populations, thus reducing the costs of employee training and eliminating
typical training schedule conflicts. The CD-ROM enables individuals to confidentially
access vital breastfeeding information whenever and wherever it's most convenient.
CQIA will present the 2004 Silver Innovation Award to LifeCare
in October at its 17th annual conference on Quality and Innovation. CQIA runs
three levels of state awards programs throughout the year in an effort to prepare
Connecticut corporations for the Malcolm Baldrige national quality Award for
Performance Excellence.
The CQIA's 2004 Silver Innovation award is the sixth award that
the LifeCare's CD-ROM has won since its release in 2003. The previous awards
include: a 2004 Clarion Award from The Association for Women in Communications;
a 2004 Crystal Award of Distinction from the Communicator Awards Association;
a 2004 Award of Distinction from The Videographer Awards Association; a Gold
Mercury Award and a Grand Award from the International Academy of Communications
Arts & Sciences.
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Studies by groups such as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the UCLA
Center for Healthier Children, Families and Communities have shown that infants who are
breastfed are more likely to have stronger immune systems initially than bottle-fed babies.
Infants who are not breastfed exclusively for the first six months may be more prone to
developing asthma, allergies, obesity, ear infections and other illnesses in childhood.
Two more studies published recentlyone in the May issue of Pediatrics
and a second one in Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviewssuggest
a decreased risk of death among breastfed infants and protection against Type 1 diabetes,
respectively.
For businesses, Burki says, the benefits of workplace breastfeeding support
are equally clear. They include significantly reduced absenteeism among working mothers,
lower health care expenses for breastfeeding mothers and their children, and a speedier
return to work following maternity leave.
The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and the Ad Council, which
are jointly spearheading the new government campaign, are also calling for the cooperation
of the nation’s employers because of the strong influence they can have on working mothers’
decisions regarding breastfeeding.
A Campaign with an Edge
The new PSAs feature pregnant women in a variety of surprising scenarios.
In one, an expecting mother is riding a mechanical bull in a bar; in another, she is competing
in a floating log competition. The ads ask: “You wouldn’t take risks before your baby’s
born. Why start after?” All of the PSAs carry the tagline: “Babies were born to be breastfed.
Breastfeed exclusively for six months.”
Carol Ann Friedman, RN, IBCLC, director of LifeCare’s Mothers at Work®
programone of the most comprehensive breastfeeding support models availablehas
counseled thousands of employees and employers on breastfeeding issues and calls the PSAs
“extremely compelling.” Friedman says that she doesn’t mind their edgy quality, especially
in light of the fact that the U.S. has one of the lowest rates of breastfeeding in the developed
world.
“Breastfeeding in this country is considered by many to be a national health
dilemma,” says Friedman. “In fact, the DHHS has committed itself to increasing the proportion
of American mothers who are breastfeeding at six months from the current level of 33 percent
to 50 percent by 2010. Since the majority of these mothers are also part of our national
labor force, employers can play a critical role in achieving this goal.”
Burki points out that many employers have already begun to lend their support
to this effort by offering their working mothers private rooms where they can express their
milk during the work day. A growing number of employers also are offering a full suite of
workplace breastfeeding support services, such as those built into LifeCare’s Mothers at
Work program, which provides women with 24/7 access to certified lactation consultants,
comprehensive educational materials, access to quality breastpumps and equipment, and instructional
classes.
Corporate support for workplace breastfeeding also has been building due
to legislative efforts. Sixteen states have now passed or are reviewing legislation requiring
employers to allow nursing women to express milk during break times and to make reasonable
efforts to provide a room (other than a restroom) where women can do so. Still, only 16
percent of U.S. employers provide lactation rooms, according to a 2001 survey by the Society
for Human Resource Management.
“Clearly, there’s a lot of room for increased support and greater awareness,”
Burki states. “We should remember that returning to work is often cited by new mothers as
one of their greatest obstacles to continuing to breastfeed. As a result, a significant
number of them experience anxiety, reduce their work hours or leave their jobs altogether.
And that’s simply not good for employers. So, when it comes right down to it, supporting
working mothers isn’t just nice to do. It’s a business imperative.”
If you’re interested in learning more about LifeCare’s Mothers at Work
program, contact your account manager. If you’re not currently a LifeCare client but wish
to learn about the program, please call 866-675-3751.
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