Loyola Earns 'Baby-Friendly' Designation from UNICEF & WHO's Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative
January 21, 2015Categories: Women's Health
Tags: Womens Health
MAYWOOD, IL – Loyola University Medical Center (LUMC) has earned the coveted "Baby-Friendly" designation. This verifies that the hospital has implemented the ten steps to help new mothers successfully breastfeed.
Loyola is the only academic medical center in the Chicago area with this distinction and one of 232 hospitals and birthing centers nationwide.
"Loyola is proud of this elite designation and the work we have accomplished to support a new mother’s choice to breastfeed," said Pam Allyn, BSN, RN, LCCE, IBCLC, board certified lactation consultant, LUMC. "We know the efforts of our physicians, nurses and staff will help to protect the health of our new moms and their infants."
The Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative is a global program that was launched in 1991 by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nationals Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to recognize hospitals and birthing centers that offer an optimal level of care for infant feeding and mother-baby bonding.
Breastfeeding has several health benefits for both infants and mothers. Breastfed children have far fewer and less serious illnesses than those who never receive breast milk. This includes a reduced risk of SIDS, childhood cancers and diabetes. Mothers who breastfeed have a decreased risk of breast and ovarian cancers, anemia and osteoporosis.
Although breastfeeding is one of the most effective preventive health measures for infants and mothers, exclusive breastfeeding rates are low. According to the CDC, only 76.5 percent of babies are ever breastfed. Of those, 37.7 percent are exclusively breastfeeding at three months, 16.4 percent are exclusively breastfeeding at six months. Breastfeeding rates are lowest among poor socio-economic populations.
Loyola set out to reverse this trend and to better support a new mother’s choice to breastfeed. The organization took a multidisciplinary approach to implement steps to successfully help mothers breastfeed including: educating pregnant women on the benefits of breastfeeding; helping mothers initiate breastfeeding within one hour of birth; showing mothers how to breastfeed and maintain lactation, even if they are separated from their infants; and educating mothers about the use of pacifiers or bottles when not medically necessary.
About Loyola Medicine
Loyola Medicine, a member of Trinity Health, is a nationally ranked academic, quaternary care system based in Chicago's western suburbs. The three-hospital system includes Loyola University Medical Center (LUMC), Gottlieb Memorial Hospital, MacNeal Hospital, as well as convenient locations offering primary care, specialty care and immediate care services from nearly 2,000 physicians throughout Cook, Will and DuPage counties. LUMC is a 547-licensed-bed hospital in Maywood that includes the William G. and Mary A. Ryan Center for Heart & Vascular Medicine, the Cardinal Bernardin Cancer Center, the John L. Keeley, MD, Emergency Department, a Level 1 trauma center, Illinois's largest burn center, the Nancy W. Knowles Orthopaedic Institute, a certified comprehensive stroke center, transplant center and a children’s hospital. Having delivered compassionate care for over 50 years, Loyola also trains the next generation of caregivers through its academic affiliation with Loyola University Chicago’s Stritch School of Medicine and Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing.
For more information, visit loyolamedicine.org. You can also follow Loyola Medicine on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram or X (formerly known as Twitter).
About Trinity Health
Trinity Health is one of the largest not-for-profit, faith-based health care systems in the nation. It is a family of 127,000 colleagues and more than 38,300 physicians and clinicians caring for diverse communities across 26 states. Nationally recognized for care and experience, the Trinity Health system includes 93 hospitals, 107 continuing care locations, the second largest PACE program in the country, 142 urgent care locations and many other health and well-being services. In fiscal year 2024, the Livonia, Michigan-based health system invested $1.3 billion in its communities in the form of charity care and other community benefit programs. For more information, visit us at www.trinity-health.org, or follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, and X (formerly known as Twitter).