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Michael Malone, 10 Jul
Healthcare West; Maureen OâConnell, Public Health Nurse, Community
Healthcare West; Dr Ethel Ryan, Neonatologist and Paediatrician,
University Hospital Galway; Dr Sinead Gavin, GP and Clinical Lead for the
âWell Baby Breastfeeding Clinicâ; Ailish Killilea, Assistant Director of
Public Health Nursing, Community Healthcare West; Maggie Coyne, Public
Health Nurse, Community Healthcare West; Mary Boyle, Administration,
Shantalla Clinic and Frances Burke, Lactation Consultant, Community
Healthcare West.
A unique breastfeeding clinic in Galway designed to support mothers who
are having difficulty breastfeeding has won two Irish Healthcare Centre
Awards.
The âWell Baby Breastfeeding Clinicâ in Galway won Best Community
Outpatient Initiative of the year and Clinical Team of the year at an
awards ceremony in May.
The clinic, the first of its kind in Ireland, is a collaboration between
the Maternity Department at UHG and the Department of Public Health
Nursing, Community Healthcare West.
It is designed to support mothers who are having difficulty breastfeeding
in the early weeks of their breastfeeding journey, whereas before they had
to present to the emergency departent.
Dr Ethel Ryan, Consultant Neonatologist and Paediatrician at UHG, and one
of the initiators of the Well Baby Breastfeeding Clinic, said:
âBreastfeeding is a learned skill acquired through education, observation
and experience.
âWhile it is the most natural way to feed babies, breastfeeding issues in
the early weeks tend to be time sensitive.
âAt our Shantalla clinic here in Galway, we currently see infants born at
University Hospital Galway and all clinic referrals come through either
the postnatal ward at UHG or your local Public Health Nurse.â
The first Well Baby Breastfeeding Clinic was held in December 2021 and saw
270 patients in the first year of service.
Dr Ryan said that this represented 10% of all infants born at University
Hospital Galway in 2022.
âA second clinic per week was added in January 2023 as a result of
increased demand for the service.â
Dr SinĂ©ad Gavin, GP and Clinical Lead for the clinic, said: âBy
identifying and addressing feeding issues as early as possible, it
facilitates improved breastfeeding outcomes and therefore we aim to see
all mothers and their infants in the same week of referral where
possible.â
The clinic identifies breastfeeding issues such as latching and
positioning issues, low milk supply, tongue tie, poor or slow weight gain,
excess wind, cracked nipples, mastitis and over supply of milk.
Each mother and baby receives a 45-minute appointment which includes a
comprehensive history assessment, a breastfeeding evaluation, infant oral
assessment and a personalised treatment plan. Tongue tie release procedure
is also performed, if required.
An independent audit of the clinic reviewed 40 patient files which
demonstrated 57% of mothers were exclusively breastfeeding at 3 months.
This compares to a national average of just 23% for the same time period.
Post clinic reviews saw that 97.5% of mothers reported that their
breastfeeding issues had been resolved and therefore did not require acute
hospital care.
Speaking about the expansion of the clinic, Dr Ethel Ryan said they are
looking to expand the service to all Galway mothers and their newborn
infants with the goal of eventually extending the clinic to other
maternity units within Saolta.
âWe are delighted to be collaborating on this project with our colleagues
from University Hospital Galway and look forward to the next step in
developing and expanding the service further,â said Helen Martin, Director
of Public Health Nursing, Community Healthcare West.
âThis project supports the governmentâs Enhanced Community Care Programme
(ECC) by improving and expanding community health services and reducing
pressure on hospital services.â