Breastfeeding & Lactation Support Policies for Medical Trainees

Breastfeeding and lactation support for medical trainees affects their own health, the health of their children, and the health of the patients and families they will take care of in the future. Research has shown that when medical trainees choose to breastfeed, they often do not receive adequate support from their colleagues and institutions and are unable to meet their personal breastfeeding goals. This experience may be detrimental to the breastfeeding and lactation care and support that they offer to their future patients and families. 

In 2020-2022, with funding through a cooperative agreement with the CDC, the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Breastfeeding put out a call for institutions interested in creating a breastfeeding-supportive policy for medical trainees. Over 70 institutions applied, and 20 were selected to participate in one of two 6 month learning collaboratives. The project materials are now available for free for any medical trainee institution interested in conducting a similar project/policy on www.aap.org/breastfeeding.

For extensive resources on creating or revising a breastfeeding and lactation support policy at your institution, visit: https://www.aap.org/en/patient-care/breastfeeding/breastfeeding–lactation-support-policies-for-medical-trainees/

You will find on this website:

  1. Draft surveys to measure knowledge of an existing breastfeeding policy 
  2. Guidelines for what should be in a policy 
  3. Sample presentations 
  4. Policy dissemination ideas

Use this step-by-step guide by the American Academy of Pediatrics to help you create or revise your institution’s policy to best support medical trainees to breastfeed. 

Steps

  1. Review and understand the AAFP model policy Breastfeeding & Lactation Support for Medical Trainees.
  2. Obtain and review any existing breastfeeding and lactation support policies established at your institution. These may be found by contacting the Human Resources department at your institution or inquiring with the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Designated Institutional Official (DIO).
  3. Consider if forming a workgroup would be helpful to reaching your goal and form if needed.
  4. Complete a pre-survey to determine your institution’s current policy alignment with the AAFP model policy. A point value is assigned to each of the five domains in the survey: Policy; Lactation Facilities; Protected Time; Culture of Support; Responsibilities. Survey results will help identify areas for improvement as well as existing strengths. If a workgroup has been assembled this can be the first activity for the group.
  5. Distribute Resident Perspective Survey to determine how medical trainees within your site view existing lactation support. You may need to obtain leadership or Institutional Review Board approval to field this survey. Survey tools such as Survey Monkey, Qualtrics, or Google Forms may be helpful to efficiently distribute the survey.
  6. Use the presentations below to educate yourself or your workgroup about writing a breastfeeding and lactation support policy.
  7. Draft a new policy, revise an existing policy, or create an action plan to assist you in planning for creating a policy. Action plan resources are available below in Workgroup Tips and Procedures.
  8. Administer a post-survey to see if alignment to the AAFP model breastfeeding and lactation support has improved. Use this information to identify successes or areas for improvement.
  9. Work on getting the policy approved by the institution. Policy review and approval processes will vary by institution. Early in the policy drafting phase, members of the workgroup may want to confirm the policy approval process specific to their institution by contacting leadership in relevant departments. Depending on the scope of the policy, it may require approval from residency program directors, the designated insitutional official (DIO), Graduate Medical Education Committee. human resource (HR) leaders, a board of directors, and/or chief executive officer (CEO).  
  10. Once the policy is approved, return to the workgroup (if formed) to develop an implementation and dissemination plan.

Read about other institutions who have implemented a breastfeeding policy and published their results.