Tag: working mom

  • 4 Strategies to Support Breastfeeding Employees

    4 Strategies to Support Breastfeeding Employees

    A wellness room is just not enough.

    The transition from maternity leave back to work is possibly the third largest life event, apart from getting married and giving birth. It’s a time where career women, full of drive and ambition, realize they have been given the gift of motherhood, and one of the many requirements that accompanies this gift is to feed their babies in whichever way, breastmilk or formula, is best for them and their family.

    Today, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 84% of moms choose to breastfeed1. And although each mom’s goals are personal and most often kept within their most trusted circle of family and friends, it is often a goal that aligns with the recommendation by the American Academy of Pediatrics – six months of exclusive breastmilk and 12 months of breastfeeding. So herein lies the problem…maternity leave and returning to work straddles that goal. As a result, that breastfeeding rate at six months postpartum drops to 57% according to the CDC Breastfeeding Report Card1.

    Companies spend thousands of dollars grooming and growing female talent in the workforce. But how does a company ensure that ROI is not lost during the transition and that new moms are aware of, and come back into, a culture of support? It starts before maternity leave. According to research, there is a 94% retention rate for employees of companies with lactation support programs2. Furthermore, there is a 77% reduction in absenteeism among firms with lactation support3. These studies are enough evidence for employers to know more can be done in the way of maternal wellness benefits.

    What can employers do? It’s simple.

    1. Create a breastfeeding policy

    Effective March 2010, a provision within the U.S. Health Care Reform Law requires a company with more than 50 employees to implement a breastfeeding policy. The purpose of this policy is to define the culture of support within an organization by defining reasonable break time, whether breaks are paid or unpaid, as well as provide grievance procedures should a mom feel discriminated against. This policy should be communicated to all employees, not just pumping moms.

    The result yields a culture of value and respect, increased loyalty, and an increase in productivity and retention. A win for both mom and employer!

    2. Provide compliant space and supplies

    The provision also requires employers to provide “a place, other than a bathroom, that is shielded from view and free from intrusion from coworkers and the public, which may be used by an employee to express breast milk.” Many employers today provide wellness or lactation rooms to meet this requirement.

    But a space alone is just the first step. Consider providing a multi-user/hospital-grade pump, pumping supplies, and snacks. These perks allow mom to travel back and forth to the office without having to lug her personal use breast pump, supplies, and snacks. This low-cost benefit allows mom to only worry about her purse, laptop, and perhaps lunch…similar to what life was like before pumping, which helps with the transition of employee to pumping employee.

    3. Assist traveling breastfeeding professionals

    Imagine going on a business trip and having to transport expressed breast milk through security, and with potential flight delays or layovers, hoping your breast milk, #liquidgold, stays at the right temperature by the time you get home? Enter breastmilk transport services! Traveling moms simply package the milk in a temperature-controlled box, bring it to the hotel concierge, and off it’s shipped to her home. Simple, uncomplicated, and a priceless benefit.

    4. Provide support

    Breastfeeding rates drop significantly from 3-6 months after baby is born. Right in that time frame is mom’s transition back to work. With the support of a lactation consultant, mom can get advice on how to pump and store her milk, what to do if her supply decreases, and much more. This support is critical to mom’s mindset as she enters back into the workplace. Providing a benefit to assist in navigating that process will lead to a less anxious and overwhelmed employee returning into the workplace, yielding a higher level of productivity.

    If you are an employer providing these amazing benefits to your employees, kudos to you! And you should be recognized as a Great Place to Pump.

    If you are an employer that wants to help pumping moms thrive, then check out the Pump@Work program – ­because pumping at work should be easy.

     

    Written by Suzy Vecchi, Director of Operations at Acelleron.
    This post was also featured on Thrive Global.

     


    1 Breastfeeding Among U.S. Children Born 2009-2016, CDC National Immunization Survey.

    2 Ortiz, J., McGilligan, K., & Kelly, P. (2004).

    3 2010 United States Breastfeeding Committee.  Workplace Accommodations to Support and Protect Breastfeeding. Washington, D.C.

  • Breastfeeding and Balance: A Mom’s Journey at Hobsons

    Breastfeeding and Balance: A Mom’s Journey at Hobsons

    This is a guest post by Danielle Kline Haber.

    Before I left my home in New Jersey one recent September morning to catch the 5:37 a.m. Amtrak train to Washington, DC, my fifteen-month-old daughter, Sloane, woke me up a half hour before my alarm was set to go off. We cuddled, I nursed her, put her back in her crib, and then I went about getting ready while my husband was still in bed sleeping. Despite my early wake-up call, it was a peaceful and calm morning, and I spent valuable time with my daughter — the kind of perfect start to a day that I savor as a working mom.

    A year earlier, my June baby had provided me with a magical maternity leave. Sloane had taken to breastfeeding like a champion from the moment she arrived and had the chubby cheeks, thick thighs, and dirty diapers to prove it. We filled our days with long, luxurious walks throughout the 300-acre park that borders our neighborhood. I loved most everything about new motherhood, except for perhaps the bone-numbing exhaustion of caring for an infant, but still I was grateful. I had always wanted to be a mom.

    “I began to feel as if dark clouds were just waiting in the wings ready to consume the precious new bond I was just beginning to nurture with my daughter.”

    Motherhood can be daunting and the mountains we will be asked to climb will all look and feel different. I write with deep compassion and consciousness for the many moms who struggle more than I did in those early weeks with issues like antepartum or postpartum depression, a premature baby, breastfeeding problems, or a lack of financial resources and a solid support system. My mountain appeared when my three-month paid maternity leave began nearing its end, and the mere thought of returning to a career that I loved and valued as a director of a global NGO in New York City began to suffocate me. Three months was not remotely enough time, and the sadness I experienced at the thought of leaving Sloane was overwhelming. I began to feel as if dark clouds were just waiting in the wings ready to consume the precious new bond I was just beginning to nurture with my daughter.

    Breastfeeding had become one of the most precious ways I connected with my baby, and I was terrified of losing that togetherness. Women are incredibly resourceful and resilient, and I planned on summoning as much of my inner strength as necessary so that I could return to work and keep breastfeeding, but the barriers seemed relentless. My commute was two hours each way door-to-door, and I was pumping 4 times per day for roughly 30 minutes at a time. That’s 2 hours per day and approximately one whole month per year. “How is this possible?” I agonized. Should I throw in the towel and be a stay-at-home mom? What about the career I had built? Could I step away even for a bit? Was this financially wise?  Before I made a drastic decision, I wanted to try to make it work, but the only way that seemed possible was to find more time.

    Around the time I returned to work in September 2018, Harpers Bazaar published the article “Why Women Really Quit Breastfeeding.” One particular message stuck with me: “Breastfeeding is often framed as a matter of women’s individual choices, rather than of environmental supports and policies that influence behavior. That framing,” [Dr. Lauren] Dinour says, “can send the message that creating the circumstances for successful breastfeeding is a woman’s responsibility alone. It’s not just a choice of ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ to breastfeeding,” she says. “It’s a choice of, ‘Can I overcome these barriers that are in place for me?’ And for many women, the answer is no.”

    “Any lactating mom knows that these bare bones federal requirements provide little support when you have to pump every day at work, no matter what meeting or event arises.”

    In 2010, the Affordable Care Act amended section 7 of the Fair Labor Standards Act.  It required employers to provide “reasonable break time for an employee to express breast milk for her nursing child for one year after the child’s birth each time such employee has need to express the milk.” The law indicates that the room must be private, and it must not be a bathroom. Any lactating mom knows that these bare bones federal requirements provide little support when you have to pump every day at work, no matter what meeting or event arises. I was fortunate to have had my own private office in which to pump. To save time, I chose to rent and keep at home the hospital-grade Medela Symphony Breast Pump because it was faster. I would leave my less expensive pump at work.

    I tried to make it work, but I truly did not see how I was going to manage it all: sleep enough to get through my work day, pump enough milk to feed my daughter, stay hydrated enough to produce enough milk, and not to mention be alert enough to do my job well. If I was lucky, I reasoned, I might get to spend an hour of my day with Sloane.

    And that was unacceptable to me, which is why I knew I needed to leave.

    I did not set out to find perfection. I set out to take a step in a more fulfilling direction by finding a company that would value me and the contributions I could make as a working mom. That’s when I discovered Hobsons, an educational technology company that lives and breathes student success. Based out of Arlington, VA, and Cincinnati, OH, its mission is to connect learning to life by matching students to opportunities across a lifetime of education decisions. Unbeknownst to me when I began interviewing, Hobsons also values work/life balance and flexibility.

    When I began my new position as a remote employee, my daughter was six-months old. I accepted the fact that there would be a day or a week here and there when I would be apart from Sloane — and that was OK with me. What kept me up at night was how I was going to start a new job while learning how to navigate traveling, pumping in the workplace (as well as the train station or airport), and then transporting milk back to my daughter. I was cognizant that any barrier to this process would likely derail my ability to feed her.

    “There are clear cost-saving benefits for employers when mothers breastfeed.”

    Even though the World Health Organization recommends “exclusive breastfeeding for up to 6 months of age, with continued breastfeeding along with appropriate complementary foods up to two years of age and beyond,” it’s very difficult for working moms to fulfill those guidelines. In fact, I recently read a statistic indicating that only 26% of mothers who choose to nurse while working full-time are still breastfeeding at six months. And yet, there is little question that breastmilk and breastfeeding have far-reaching health benefits for both mom and baby. Several studies indicate that breastfeeding mothers often have an easier recovery, as well as reduced rates of breast cancer, ovarian cancer, high blood pressure, arthritis, heart disease, and depression. Other established studies indicate that there are countless benefits for baby like reduced rates of middle ear infections, respiratory tract infections, colds, gut infections, intestinal tissue damage, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), allergies, Celiac disease, diabetes, and childhood leukemia. There are clear cost-saving benefits for employers when mothers breastfeed. Breastfeeding moms and their babies who are valued in the workplace take fewer sick days and have better morale and higher rates of retention.


    Photo credit: Phoebe Bouras’ new “Hobsons baby”

    On my first day, one of the first stops on the office tour at Hobsons was the Moms’ Room — a private, locked room with a comfortable couch, relaxing lights, a sink, a refrigerator and freezer, soap, sanitizer, towels, disposable breast pads, and lots of snacks. There were boards to share photos of new babies at Hobsons. Later that day, I would learn that a private Moms’ Room Outlook calendar allowed lactating moms to reserve the time necessary, and an internal Slack channel provided us with the opportunity to connect with and support each other. Hobsons had booked me a hotel room with a full kitchen including a refrigerator and dishwasher — a necessity when sanitizing pumping parts and freezing milk. All of this was fantastic. But what I came to learn that I believe sets Hobsons apart is that our leadership is listening. On one of my first weeks in the office, I worked up some courage to express a concern about pumping in the workplace to one of my new, thoughtful colleagues. His response: “Don’t worry. Kate is a mom. She gets it.” Kate Cassino is Hobsons’ CEO.

    Expressing milk is a profoundly personal experience. Having to navigate the personal in a professional setting is tough and requires immense support.  It requires legislation. It requires supportive employers and colleagues. It requires many conversations on this topic so that every workplace can learn how to invest in better breastfeeding programs and policies.

    “If I can be one small voice advancing this conversation forward, I aim to keep doing so until all companies in the United States step up.”

    I am deeply aware that I fall into the minority of working women who have made it past a year in their breastfeeding journey. Today, Sloane is a vibrant and healthy little girl who, I am proud to say, has only been absent from daycare twice with brief illnesses, likely because I have had the ability to breastfeed. I still nurse her every morning, although I now only have to pump once per day. I primarily work from home, which gives me time in the morning and evening to enjoy my daughter. That is four hours per day — 20 hours every single week — that I would have lost if I did not work for Hobsons.

    If I can be one small voice advancing this conversation forward, I aim to keep doing so until all companies in the United States step up. Until that day, it’s a joy to work for Hobsons, a company that keeps getting it right for its working and breastfeeding moms.

     Danielle is the Director of Development and Institutional Advancement at Hobsons.

  • Acelleron Launches Pump@Work Program for Employers

    Acelleron Launches Pump@Work Program for Employers

    Acelleron launches Pump@Work program for employers looking to support and retain breastfeeding women in the workplace!

    Despite health benefits for both mother and baby, many breastfeeding moms stop nursing when they return to work due to their commute, work schedule, unsuitable nursing room conditions, or general lack of awareness or support in the workplace.

    “Employers play a key role in a woman’s decision about whether she breastfeeds exclusively and for how long she breastfeeds,” says Jason Canzano, managing director at Acelleron. “Nearly 90% of the moms we survey at three months postpartum are pumping at work or planning to pump when they return to work. We knew we needed to develop a program to help sustain breastfeeding in the workplace.”

    Acelleron’s Pump@Work program is a low-cost, monthly subscription that removes workplace barriers and can help increase breastfeeding rates when moms return to work. By providing a multi-user/hospital-grade breast pump, essential pumping supplies, and milk-boosting lactation snacks and tea for a company’s lactation room, the hassle for breastfeeding moms lugging these items back and forth to work is removed. Employers can purchase one or all three of Acelleron’s Pump@Work subscriptions.

    Employer lactation programs not only benefit breastfeeding moms, but also companies that incorporate them. Some of these benefits include increased employee loyalty and productivity, as well as positive public relations. In addition, research and case studies show a 77 percent reduction in absenteeism, health care savings, and a 94 percent increase in employee retention.

    For more information on Acelleron’s Pump@Work program, visit acelleron.com/pumpatwork.

    About Acelleron                                                                            

    Acelleron, a health and wellness company, provides innovative solutions to families, employers, and health care providers through quality education, support, and products. We are committed to empowering women and families to achieve success from pregnancy to parenting and the return to work.

    For more information about our services, please visit acelleron.com.

  • Acelleron Launches ”Great Place to Pump” Designation

    Acelleron Launches ”Great Place to Pump” Designation

    Acelleron, a health and wellness company, announces the launch of Great Place to Pump, a prestigious designation now available to employers. Great Place to Pump is an annual designation recognizing breastfeeding and pumping-friendly workplaces based on the successful establishment of policies, education, support, and accommodations for breastfeeding employees.

    “We are ecstatic to recognize employers that value and support the strength and commitment of breastfeeding women in the workplace,” said Suzanne Vecchi, director of operations for Acelleron. “Providing a great place to pump for moms will not only support their personal goals but will also help retain them as valuable employees and attract great talent to the organization.”

    Companies that become a Great Place to Pump will receive a certificate of designation, as well as a marketing toolkit, to help share this remarkable achievement with their company and the public.

    According to the CDC 2018 Breastfeeding Report Card, over 80% of American mothers breastfeed their babies. Women comprise nearly half of the U.S. labor force and, for new mothers, the thought of returning to work and breastfeeding can be challenging. Breastfeeding mothers who are away from their babies need to express milk two to three times during an eight-hour workday to maintain their milk supply and avoid health complications. Employer support and accommodations for breastfeeding moms returning to work is crucial for this transition and should be recognized.

    Great Place to Pump applications are now being accepted at greatplacetopump.com. Organizations will be notified of the next steps upon submission.

    If you have questions regarding the Great Place to Pump designation, or the overall application process, please contact Acelleron at (877) 932-6327 or email wellness@acelleron.com.

    Acelleron, a health and wellness company, provides innovative solutions to families, employers, and health care providers through quality education, support, and products. We are committed to empowering women and families to achieve success from pregnancy to parenting and the return to work. From the early days of pregnancy and beyond, we are here to provide quality education and breastfeeding support during such an important journey.

    We are committed to transforming the customer experience by applying our expertise in health insurance, medical equipment, wellness services, and technology. This customer dedication allows us to deliver the highest standards of care, resulting in long-standing relationships with over 1,000 corporate partners, pediatric practices, medical centers, and OB/GYN offices. For more information, please visit acelleron.com