4.4 Article

Building the competency of health professionals in the Kyrgyz Republic for the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative

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MATERNAL AND CHILD NUTRITION
卷 19, 期 4, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13506

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Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative; breastfeeding; breastfeeding support; breastfeeding training; health professional; qualitative methods

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This study examines the Kyrgyz Republic's efforts to build health professional competency in breastfeeding counselling and support. It finds that while the country has a new policy aligned with BFHI global standards, the policy has not been widely disseminated, lacks guidance on competency monitoring and preservice training, and faces limitations in terms of curriculum, trainers, and resources. The study also highlights the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on BFHI training and service delivery, but recognizes the country's resilience in adapting through individual champions and online training.
Health professional competency building is one of nine national responsibilities (to achieve universal coverage and sustainability) described in the 2018 World Health Organization/UNICEF implementation guidance for the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI). Skilled breastfeeding support as a standard of newborn care is critical to the establishment of lactation and exclusive breastfeeding. This qualitative case study describes the Kyrgyz Republic's experience with health professional competency building related to breastfeeding counselling and support. We interviewed 38 key informants and reviewed national policies and international guidelines related to BFHI. The study found that although the country has a new policy reflecting BFHI global standards and guidance, the policy has not been disseminated nationally. Additionally, the policy lacks guidance on competency monitoring and verification and does not mention preservice training, even though preservice training on breastfeeding support exists. To achieve universal coverage for health professional competencies, the Kyrgyz Republic uses preservice, in-service and refresher training. However, the main limitations to aligning with the new guidance are a lack of preservice BFHI- and breastfeeding-specific curricula, experienced trainers and sufficient time and funding to dedicate to practical skill development. Conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, this study confirmed disruptions to BFHI training and service delivery but also documents the Kyrgyz Republic's resilient strides to mitigate impacts on breastfeeding support through facility-level individual champions and adjustments to training such as going online. Opportunities exist for strengthening the competencies of service providers through strengthened preservice training, comprehensive and consistent in-service training, solutions for overworked service providers and clear and sufficiently funded monitoring guidance.

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