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Maternity Practices Score
Maternity Practices Score in Arkansas
Arkansas

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Arkansas Value:

75

Maternity Practices in Infant and Nutrition Care (mPINC) survey score based on seven birth facility policies and practices, with higher scores denoting better maternity care policies and practices

Arkansas Rank:

41

Maternity Practices Score in depth:

Maternity Practices Score by State

Maternity Practices in Infant and Nutrition Care (mPINC) survey score based on seven birth facility policies and practices, with higher scores denoting better maternity care policies and practices




Maternity Practices Score Trends

Maternity Practices in Infant and Nutrition Care (mPINC) survey score based on seven birth facility policies and practices, with higher scores denoting better maternity care policies and practices

Trend: Maternity Practices Score in Arkansas, United States, 2022 Health Of Women And Children Report

Maternity Practices in Infant and Nutrition Care (mPINC) survey score based on seven birth facility policies and practices, with higher scores denoting better maternity care policies and practices

Arkansas
United States
Source:

 CDC, mPINC State Reports

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Maternity Practices Score

Trend: Maternity Practices Score in Arkansas, United States, 2022 Health Of Women And Children Report

Maternity Practices in Infant and Nutrition Care (mPINC) survey score based on seven birth facility policies and practices, with higher scores denoting better maternity care policies and practices

Arkansas
United States
Source:

 CDC, mPINC State Reports

About Maternity Practices Score

US Value: 81

Top State(s): New Hampshire: 90

Bottom State(s): Tennessee: 70

Definition: Maternity Practices in Infant and Nutrition Care (mPINC) survey score based on seven birth facility policies and practices, with higher scores denoting better maternity care policies and practices

Data Source and Years: CDC, mPINC State Reports, 2020

Suggested Citation: America's Health Rankings analysis of CDC, mPINC State Reports, United Health Foundation, AmericasHealthRankings.org, accessed 2023.

Although most hospital administrators and staff agree that breastfeeding provides optimal nutrition for most infants, many hospitals and clinics fail to implement practices that support breastfeeding.

In 2003, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with the assistance of an expert panel, established an ongoing national survey system to monitor and evaluate hospital practices related to breastfeeding among all facilities that routinely provide maternity care in the United States. First administered in 2007, the Maternity Practices in Infant Nutrition and Care (mPINC) survey measures the quality of hospital maternity practices to support breastfeeding. 

Surveyed birthing hospitals and facilities receive a total mPINC score. These scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores representing better maternity care practices. Each state also receives its own mPINC score and report with the proportion of hospital facilities within the state that reported the ideal responses to each question on the survey. 

The survey monitors aspects of maternal breastfeeding and newborn care such as:

  • Immediate postpartum care.
  • Rooming-in.
  • Feeding practices.
  • Feeding education and support.
  • Discharge support.
  • Institutional management.

To improve an mPINC score, a hospital should seek to improve its practices in the seven dimensions of care. Improvement in any of those dimensions will likely increase the overall mPINC score, and each dimension of care has several areas of potential improvement. 

Following the establishment of the mPINC survey, researchers have observed improvements in many of the maternity care policies and practices that are part of the mPINC survey, though such changes cannot be directly attributed to the survey itself. Further, the mPINC survey has led some hospitals and birth facilities to work together to improve adherence to the standard of care.

Healthy People 2030 has two objectives related to breastfeeding, including to increase the proportion of infants who are exclusively breastfed through 6 months of age, and to increase the proportion of infants who are breastfed at 1 year.

Edwards, Roger A., and Barbara L. Philipp. 2010. “Using Maternity Practices in Infant Nutrition and Care (MPINC) Survey Results as a Catalyst for Change.” Journal of Human Lactation 26 (4): 399–404. https://doi.org/10.1177/0890334410371212.

Hudacek, Sharon S. 2008. “Dimensions of Caring: A Qualitative Analysis of Nurses’ Stories.” Journal of Nursing Education 47 (3): 124–29. https://doi.org/10.3928/01484834-20080301-04.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 2011. “The Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding.” Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Surgeon General. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK52682/.

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