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The Baby-Friendly Hospital InitiativeHospitals and maternity units set a powerful example for new mothers. The Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative ( BFHI ), launched in 1991, is an effort by UNICEF and the World Health Organization to ensure that all maternities,whether free standing or in a hospital, become centers of breastfeeding support.
A maternity facility can be designated 'baby-friendly' when it does not accept free or low-cost breastmilk substitutes, feeding bottles or teats, and has implemented 10 specific steps to support successful breastfeeding. The process is currently controlled by national breastfeeding authorities, using Global Criteria that can be applied to maternity care in every country. Implementation guides for the BFHI have been developed by UNICEF and WHO. FHI Part II provides the Global Criteria and outlines how to transform hospital practices. Part IV and Part VI help to verify the ending of free and low-cost supplies of breastmilk substitutes. Additional BFHI Parts, including questionnaires used by external teams to assess facilities before Baby-Friendly designation, may be requested when appropriate from the breastfeeding authority of each country. Please see the following list of Baby Friendly Hospitals on a country by country basis. In areas where hospitals have achieved baby-friendly status, more mothers are breastfeeding their infants, and child health improves as a consequence. Since the BFHI began, more than 15,000 facilities in 134 countries have been awarded Baby-Friendly status. In many areas where hospitals have been designated Baby-Friendly, more mothers are breastfeeding their infants, and child health has improved. News of the BFHI accomplishments and articles about effective breastfeeding programmes have been published for ten years in UNICEF's BFHI News. New knowledge about breastfeeding and its management has been provided through publication of four training courses, and through recommendation of selected Breastfeeding Papers of the Month . Success Stories
The internationally defined term 'Baby-Friendly' may be used only by maternity services that have passed external assessment according to the Global Criteria for the BFHI. The term "Baby-Friendly" is not appropriately applied to other medical services, community activities, workplaces or commercial products. Descriptions such as 'breastfeeding-friendly', 'mother-child friendly' or 'pro-breastfeeding' may be used for such other complementary efforts to help mothers to breastfeed. |
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