Social value of maintaining baby-friendly hospital initiative accreditation in Australia: case study
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Authors
Pramono, Andini
Smith, Julie
Desborough, Jane
Bourke, Siobhan
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BioMed Central
Abstract
Background: Breastfeeding has positive impacts on the health, environment, and economic wealth of families and
countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) launched the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) in 1991 as a
global program to incentivize maternity services to implement the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding (Ten
Steps). These were developed to ensure that maternity services remove barriers for mothers and families to
successfully initiate breastfeeding and to continue breastfeeding through referral to community support after
hospital discharge. While more than three in four births in Australia take place in public hospitals, in 2020 only 26%
of Australian hospitals were BFHI-accredited. So what is the social return to investing in BFHI accreditation in
Australia, and does it incentivize BFHI accreditation? This study aimed to examine the social value of maintaining
the BFHI accreditation in one public maternity unit in Australia using the Social Return on Investment (SROI)
framework. This novel method was developed in 2000 and measures social, environmental and economic
outcomes of change using monetary values.
Method: The study was non-experimental and was conducted in the maternity unit of Calvary Public Hospital,
Canberra, an Australian BFHI-accredited public hospital with around 1000 births annually. This facility provided an
opportunity to illustrate costs for maintaining BFHI accreditation in a relatively affluent urban population.
Stakeholders considered within scope of the study were the mother-baby dyad and the maternity facility. We
interviewed the hospital’s Director of Maternity Services and the Clinical Midwifery Educator, guided by a structured
questionnaire, which examined the cost (financial, time and other resources) and benefits of each of the Ten Steps.
Analysis was informed by the Social Return on Investment (SROI) framework, which consists of mapping the
stakeholders, identifying and valuing outcomes, establishing impact, calculating the ratio and conducting sensitivity
analysis. This information was supplemented with micro costing studies from the literature that measure the
benefits of the BFHI. Results: The social return from the BFHI in this facility was calculated to be AU$ 1,375,050. The total investment
required was AU$ 24,433 per year. Therefore, the SROI ratio was approximately AU$ 55:1 (sensitivity analysis: AU$
16–112), which meant that every AU$1 invested in maintaining BFHI accreditation by this maternal and newborn
care facility generated approximately AU$55 of benefit.
Conclusions: Scaled up nationally, the BFHI could provide important benefits to the Australian health system and
national economy. In this public hospital, the BFHI produced social value greater than the cost of investment,
providing new evidence of its effectiveness and economic gains as a public health intervention. Our findings using
a novel tool to calculate the social rate of return, indicate that the BHFI accreditation is an investment in the health
and wellbeing of families, communities and the Australian economy, as well as in health equity
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International Journal for Equity in Health
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