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		Lincoln Memorial Offers In-Person, 
		Hotline Support for Breastfeeding
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		 [July 15, 2022] 
 Breastfeeding for two years or more can lower a child’s 
		risk for respiratory tract infections, severe diarrhea and ear 
		infections as well as decrease the breastfeeding mother’s risk for 
		maternal Type 2 diabetes, according to the American Academy of 
		Pediatrics (AAP).
 
 “We already knew breastfeeding through the first year was beneficial to 
		both mother and baby, but we have learned just how very beneficial 
		breastfeeding can be and that has caused experts to revise their 
		previous recommendations,” said Lindsey Burge, a registered nurse in the 
		obstetrics department at Lincoln Memorial Hospital.
 
 The AAP had previously recommended children be exclusively breastfed for 
		about six months, at which point solid foods are introduced in addition 
		to breastfeeding through the child’s first year. A policy statement 
		issued by the AAP in late June recommends breastfeeding for two years or 
		more.
 
 Lincoln Memorial Hospital partners with Springfield Clinic and the Logan 
		County Department of Public Health to offer a free weekly breastfeeding 
		support group from noon to 1:30 p.m. Wednesdays in the Graue Room inside 
		the hospital, 200 Stahlhut Drive, Lincoln.
 
		
		 
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Certified lactation consultants lead the group. They encourage 
participants to engage in open discussion as they learn to gauge how much 
nutrition a child receives during each feeding and how to overcome challenges to 
breastfeeding. 
In addition, the hospital offers a 24/7 breastfeeding hotline 
staffed by lactation consultants. The number to call is 217-605-5231.
 
 
“There are common obstacles to sustained breastfeeding that are beyond our moms’ 
control that may lead to premature weaning off breastmilk. For instance, 
employed mothers who return to work may not have access to a safe, clean space 
to pump breastmilk or do not have access to on-site child care,” said Carly 
Winkelmann, a registered nurse in the obstetrics department at Lincoln Memorial 
Hospital. “But other aspects to breastfeeding are within our moms’ control, and 
they may just need the proper support to achieve their breastfeeding goals.”
 
 The most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports 
84 percent of babies born in Illinois start out being breastfed. Fifty-four 
percent are still breastfeeding at 6 months, with 25 percent breastfed 
exclusively. Thirty-two percent of babies are still breastfed at one year.
 
				 
			[Michael Leathers]   |