Parents talk after baby dies in a car seat 08/10/2011
Stephen Quale and Whitney Haney just can't figure out how it happened - how their 8-month-old baby boy died when they left him in his car seat. "I've heard of other kids getting into cars or being left out in the heat and dying in car seats, but never just falling asleep in a car seat and not waking up," said dad Stephen Quale. Haney said she brought her son Landon over to her mother's house. He had fallen asleep in his car seat. "I didn't want to put him on the bed because I was afraid he was gonna roll off. That was the only place that he had to lay. He didn't have a baby bed there or nothing," said Haney. She went on to explain that she went outside to check on the other kids, and wasn't gone very long. "I walked back in and he was blue. And I picked him up and I tried to do CPR on him and he wouldn't move or nothing." They rushed Baby Landon to the hospital, but he died at UK Sunday. The coroner said it was from injuries consistent with positional asphyxia, saying Landon was sleeping in a position where he couldn't breathe. "They fall asleep in the car every time you go and when you pull them out of the car - I thought it was gonna be safe for him - you don't want to wake him up sometimes to put him in the bed," said Quale, "please don't leave your kids in car seats." Add Comment The Big Latch On 08/07/2011
Several nursing mothers gathered Saturday in Fountain Square Park downtown to breast-feed their babies at exactly 10:30 a.m. as part of The Big Latch On, a worldwide celebration for World Breastfeeding Week, which runs from Aug. 1-7 annually. “This is just a great event,” nurse and midwife Lisa Dalporto said. Saturday’s rain held out just long enough for the mothers to sit in the grass at the park and nurse their children to be part of the celebration, which took place at 10:30 a.m. local time in every city that participated. “Breast-feeding doesn’t require any special knowledge, but it does require support,” said Dalporto, of Bowling Green. Women from prior generations could rely on their mothers for support. But now that family members have moved away from each other, women sometimes have to rely on other mothers to support their desire to breast-feed, Dalporto said. Dalporto is a co-chairwoman of BabyNetKy, a network of professionals and community members who actively support families during the childbearing years through education about pregnancy, childbirth, breast-feeding and parenting. BabyNetKy.com organized the local Latch On event. The purpose of The Big Latch On is to raise awareness about breast-feeding and its benefits to babies. “I’m a huge supporter of breast-feeding,” said Julia Belden of Bowling Green, who attended the event and fed her 7-month-old daughter, Savannah Lee. “I feel that it’s the healthiest thing for my daughter. It’s extremely easy.” Belden attributes her daughter’s good health to breast-feeding, which has been proven to help a baby’s immune system. “She hasn’t been sick yet,” Belden said. Seven-week-old Daniel Rush slept soundly throughout the event while his mother, Meredith Rush of Bowling Green, nursed him. His sister, Anna Jo Rush, 7, sat beside the two with her doll in her lap. Rush wanted to send the message to others that nursing a baby is a natural, healthy thing to do. “It’s good for your children,” she said. “Our bodies were created to grow our babies and feed our babies,” said Melissa Jolly of Bowling Green, who participated with her 7-month-old daughter, Dehlia. She also breast-fed her oldest daughter, Maggie, who is 6 years old and never gets sick, she said. Lactation education New mothers interested in breast-feeding offered supply bags filled with information, goodies By ALYSSA HARVEY, The Daily News, aharvey@bgdailynews.com Friday, July 29, 2011 9:41 PM CDT Print this story | Email this story | | Text Size Miranda Pederson/Daily News Ellyson Sloan McIntosh models her new T-shirt, which came in a breast-feeding supply bag provided to her mother, Nichole McIntosh. advertisement When Nichole McIntosh gave birth to her daughter, Ellyson, on Wednesday, she knew she wanted to breast-feed. The Bowling Green woman had successfully breast-fed her son, Eli, who is now 5, for about six months. “He was born four weeks early. He was not as good an eater,” she said as she nursed Ellyson in her room at The Medical Center on Thursday. “I know a lot more this time. I have more information. Breast-feeding is more common now.” BabyNet - a local group that provides education about preconception, pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum, breast-feeding and parenting - and Women, Infants and Children, a national supplemental food program administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, want to make sure moms such as McIntosh get all the information they need by providing bags with breast-feeding supplies and information. “Formula companies have historically given out discharge bags with a can of formula,” said Dana Bennett, a registered dietitian and certified lactation consultant at the Allen County Health Department and regional breast-feeding promotion coordinator for the state. “The problem is that even the presence of any kind of artificial nipples undermines breast-feeding success.” The bags have been helpful to the moms, said Marilyn Thomas, a lactation consultant at The Medical Center, which had a 64 percent breast-feeding initiation rate for June. “We’ve had some moms who are offered a bag from a formula company and they state that they’re not going to use that,” she said. “This helps them.” McIntosh said the bag is really nice. “I like that it has the video,” she said. “There’s a book where you can keep track of feeding times. When you’re up all night long, you forget the last time you fed the baby.” Bennett said 125 bags have been done in the Barren River Area Development District, mostly at The Medical Center. “They have been well-received,” she said. “The lactation consultants have been great about encouraging (the nurses) to give the bags.” The bags - which come in pink, blue and yellow - are given to mothers who are exclusively breast-feeding before they are discharged from the hospital. They contain a coordinating changing pad, swaddle blanket, breast-feeding book, washable breast pads, a breast-feeding log and the video “Breastfeeding: You Can Do It!” “It’s filled with things we thought would be of value to breast-feeding moms,” Bennett said. “With the DVD, they can see pictures of how the babies latch on.” The bags also have a card on which mothers can write an evaluation of the bag. Those who fill them out receive a T-shirt for the baby that reads, “I eat at mom’s.” They can also submit evaluations at the BabyNet website, babynetky.net. “We’re hoping to get some feedback from around the state,” Bennett said. Bennett has also been supplying reusable, washable canvas bags with the international breast-feeding logo at southcentral Kentucky farmers markets to raise more awareness for World Breastfeeding Week, which starts Monday and continues through Aug. 7. The bags will be handed out to the public at Bowling Green-Warren County Farmers Market, Southern Kentucky Farmers Market and Community Farmers Market Bowling Green on Aug. 6. “Vendors put the produce in them,” she said. Various health organizations - including the American Academy of Pediatrics - support breast-feeding. At its website at www.aap.org, the organization recommends exclusively breast-feeding for about the first six months and supports breast-feeding for the first year and beyond as long as mutually desired by mother and child. Studies have shown that benefits of breast-feeding include reducing the risk of various illnesses, enhancing brain development and developing stronger facial muscles for the baby and, in mothers, reducing the risk for breast and ovarian cancer and helping them get back to their pre-pregnancy weight quicker. “Formula is much harder for the baby to digest,” Bennett said. “Breast milk is perfectly designed for baby. They only eat until they are full and then they stop.” The Big Latch On 08/01/2011
On Saturday August 6th, 2011 at 10:30am local time in locations across the USA, nursing mothers will gather to celebrate World Breastfeeding Week and try to break the record for the most women breastfeeding simultaneously! At each registered location, witnesses will count all the mothers that have latched their babies on for one minute at 10:30am. Join us at Fountain Square Park to meet other breastfeeding moms and supporters! Registration begins at 10 am Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Position 08/01/2011
WIC Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Training with Potential for Part-time Contract The Barren River District Health Department is accepting applications for WIC Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Trainees. Four to six women will be selected to attend a five-day training to learn how to give basic breastfeeding information and support for WIC mothers who are pregnant or breastfeeding. The training will be held September 26-30, 2011 for four hours per day. Trainees will be paid $160 for attending all five days of training, and lunch will be provided. The minimum requirements are: must have successfully breastfed (6 months exclusively) at least one baby and have been a WIC participant. Preference will be given to bilingual candidates who are fluent in both English and Spanish. The successful applicant will be required to pass a pre-employment drug test and background check. Applications may be picked up at any Barren River District Health Department or by clicking here. Return completed application to: Human Resources Director, P.O. Box 1157, Bowling Green, KY 42102 by COB on August 15, 2011. EOE. Individuals who successfully complete Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Training will be considered for a Contract Part-time Breastfeeding Peer Counselor position as openings and funding become available. Breastfeeding Peer Counselors work an average of 10 hours per week and must be willing to make and receive phone calls from home using a phone provided by the health department in order to provide breastfeeding information and support for WIC mothers who are pregnant or breastfeeding. In addition to providing counseling, duties include use of a web-based computer program to document services, as well as attendance at mandatory state and district meetings and trainings. Other duties as assigned. Travel will be required to other counties as needed after training is complete. Applicants must have reliable transportation and a valid driver's license. Hourly wage is $8.00 per hour. |





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