April 14, 2026

Strategies for Continuity of Care in Breastfeeding | Breastfeeding

Strategies for Continuity of Care in Breastfeeding | Breastfeeding

Background

A woman breastfeeding a child while a grandmother offers support.

Cultural norms can influence how long a mother breastfeeds.

Federal

Multiple factors can influence the ability to start and continue breastfeeding. Such factors might include a lack of access to community breastfeeding support or encounters with providers who are untrained in the clinical evaluation and management of breastfeeding problems.

Did you know?

Continuity of Care in breastfeeding is achieved by consistent, collaborative, and seamless delivery of high-quality services. These services begin in pregnancy and continue until families are no longer breastfeeding. Continuity of care results in transitions that are coordinated and fully supportive of families throughout their breastfeeding journey.

Communities, workplaces, childcare agencies, hospitals, health care providers, lactation support providers, and related social support service providers can make breastfeeding easier and achievable. Eliminating disparities in breastfeeding support is fundamental to ensuring every infant can have optimal nutrition. When systems of care align to support breastfeeding, states and communities can better address the unique barriers facing their specific population.

Potential state activities

Tip

* Designates short-term activities that can generally be accomplished in 1 to 2 years.

+ Designates long-term activities that may take up to 5 years.

*+ Designates activities that may be short- or long-term, depending on the organization’s capacity, previous work in this area, and size of the project.

Work with partners to:

Use CDC data sources to help identify gaps and needs in your state.*+ Examples include:

Identify opportunities for state and local breastfeeding coalitions, community organizations, and groups that represent the population to carry out comprehensive, high-quality, seamless breastfeeding support programs and services, especially among populations most at risk for not breastfeeding.*+

Collaborate with hospitals to identify opportunities and carry out interventions to improve maternity care practices supportive of breastfeeding.*+

Help clinics and provider offices develop a written breastfeeding-friendly office policy and implement practices that can improve breastfeeding rates by meeting the unique needs of their patients. Learn more in Tools from State Programs and Working Together. Also see:*

Provide employers with resources and technical assistance to help them comply with federal and state regulations on lactation support in the workplace. Share examples of how federal law can be put into action in a variety of work settings. Adapt and disseminate materials to educate employers about the benefits of providing comprehensive, high-quality support for lactating employees.*

Plan and conduct a summit of key state and local decision makers in workplaces, hospitals, clinics, child care agencies, communities, and government to address ongoing challenges to comprehensive, connected, and high-quality lactation support.*

Assess opportunities for early care and education (ECE) centers to support breastfeeding by meeting licensing regulations from the National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child Care and Early Education

  • Support breastfeeding during child care hours.
  • Recommend that staff or parents feed breast milk.
  • Require comfortable arrangements for mothers to breastfeed or express milk on-site.*+

Find more breastfeeding and Early Care and Education Resources.

Improve the capacity to deliver culturally relevant breastfeeding services in communities most at risk of not breastfeeding. Accomplish this by training all individuals who serve the family unit to work collaboratively to provide consistent, tailored, and evidence-based lactation education and support.*+

Coordinate breastfeeding support training for the lactation workforce, increase the number of lactation support providers who represent communities with low breastfeeding rates, and facilitate continuing education for these providers.*+

Two women breastfeed two children while sitting on a porch outside a house.

Breastmilk is the best source of nutrition for most infants.

Potential local activities

Review Continuity of Care in Breastfeeding Support; a Blueprint for Communities

  • Create community environments that proactively promote, protect, and support breastfeeding. This can be done in spaces where families live, work, play, worship, shop, travel, receive services, and raise children. *+
  • Increase the community’s ability to provide consistent, tailored, evidence-based lactation education and support by regularly training anyone who provides services to families. *+
  • Provide family-centered lactation care that responds to a wide range of needs, including access to nutritious and affordable food and other factors related to their infant feeding journey. *+
  • Implement a care coordination system that begins with the prenatal period and continues through weaning stages. The system can include formal referral systems, follow-up accountability, and hand-off protocols during transitions of lactation care from one provider or setting to another. *+
A mother breastfeeds her infant with support from an older woman.

Community support can make breastfeeding easier and achievable.

Working together

Voices of Black Mothers: The Baby-Friendly Experience

Local Communities Implementing the Continuity of Care in Breastfeeding Support Blueprint
Ten local organizations and their community partners implemented two or more recommendations from the Continuity of Care in Breastfeeding Support: A Blueprint for Communities to improve the local breastfeeding landscape in communities of racial and ethnic groups. This resource outlines project implementations, successes, challenges, and lessons learned.

Washington State Department of Health’s Lactation and Infant Feeding-Friendly Environments Hospital Program
This voluntary designation program recognizes the important role hospitals play in supporting breastfeeding.

Resources

Baby-Friendly USA Guidelines and Evaluation Criteria

CDC Guide to Strategies to Support Breastfeeding Mothers and Babies

Continuity of Care in Breastfeeding Support; a Blueprint for Communities

EMPower Training Initiative

Illinois Public Health Institute’s Improving Lactation Support & Continuity of Care
Strategy examples for institutions, including health care, community organizations, schools, and worksites.

mPINC Ten Steps Assessment Tool
Tool to assess a hospital’s implementation of each of the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding

Physician Education and Training to Support Breastfeeding
Resources to increase the availability and accessibility of medical provider education and training. Designed to improve capacity of medical providers to facilitate evidence-based care with their practices and promote continuity of breastfeeding-related care in the community.

The Role of Law & Policy in Assisting Families to Reach Healthy People’s Maternal, Infant, and Child Health Breastfeeding Goals in the United States

The Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding (pages 70–77)
Steps state and local governments can take to increase mother-to-mother and professional support. Includes action steps for multiple sectors and settings.

Cross-cutting areas

Communication tips to support program efforts.

Evaluation framework for making evaluations useful, feasible, ethical, accurate, and culturally responsive.

Health for All tools to help remove barriers to health.

Definitions

Lactation Support Provider

Maternity Care Practices that support breastfeeding take place during pregnancy, labor and delivery, and after delivery. Maternity care practices can be reflected in policies.

Additional priority strategies

link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © All rights reserved. | Newsphere by AF themes.