2006
DOI: 10.2223/jped.1490
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Hospital-acquired malnutrition

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“…The hospitalisation of infants seems a good opportunity to detect those who are not BF and offer their mothers relactation support during admission. This is already recommended for the treatment of infants with severe acute malnutrition (WHO, 2013 ), and proposed for prevention of hospital‐acquired malnutrition (J. G. B. Alves, 2006 ). Outpatient follow‐up after hospital discharge should be considered, since the time needed to establish lactation can exceed the days of hospitalisation (Nuzhat et al, 2019 ) and mothers are likely to stop or reduce BF once at home (Mahgoub et al, 2001 ; Nyati et al, 2014 ; Oberlin, 2006 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hospitalisation of infants seems a good opportunity to detect those who are not BF and offer their mothers relactation support during admission. This is already recommended for the treatment of infants with severe acute malnutrition (WHO, 2013 ), and proposed for prevention of hospital‐acquired malnutrition (J. G. B. Alves, 2006 ). Outpatient follow‐up after hospital discharge should be considered, since the time needed to establish lactation can exceed the days of hospitalisation (Nuzhat et al, 2019 ) and mothers are likely to stop or reduce BF once at home (Mahgoub et al, 2001 ; Nyati et al, 2014 ; Oberlin, 2006 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%