CLC Exam Questions with Correct Answer
1. What point does baby blues occur in the pp period? first few days after birth
2. What point in the pp period does baby blues occur? first few days after birth
3. What point in the pp period does pp depression occur? gradually in the first year
4. What point in pp does pp panic disorder occur? 3-4 weeks
5. pp panic disorder characteristics: difficulty breathing, extreme anxiety, dizzi- ness, tremors, shaking
6. dysphoric milk ejection reflex (D-MER): a cluster of symptoms that happen in the first 30-120 seconds of milk
flow (symptoms: sadness, depression, anxiety, irritability, and restlessness
7. How many deaths occurred in 2015 in the neonate period?: 2.7 million
8. What was the number one cause of deaths in the neonate period in 2015?-
: pneumonia and diarrhea
9. How much would it cost to scale up to do everything to prevent neonate deaths?: less than 6 billion
worldwide
10. First 1,000 days campaign: includes 270 days of pregnancy up to 2 years worldwide and includes
breastfeeding
11. What are the characteristics of baby blues?: crying for no reason, irritability, anger, impatience’s, restlessness,
anxiety, exhaustion, insomnia, appetite distur- bances
12. Women who do not breastfeed are at a greater risk for which 5 things?: MI and metabolic syndrome
breast, endometrial and ovarian cancer
13. How much does your risk decrease for hypertension, diabetes and cardiac disease if you BF for at least a
,year?: 10-15%
14. 3 strategies that WHO and UNICEF set out to increase BF initiation and du- ration: Breastfeeding Promotion,
Breastfeeding Protection, Breastfeeding Support 2x more likely when all 3 are present
15. breastfeeding promotion according to WHO and UNICEF: focuses on advan- tages of breastfeeding on a
personal, community, country or global level
16. breastfeeding protection: focuses on govt, manufacturer and social respon- sibility to assure breastfeeding's
ability to compete with commercial interests, ad- dresses improper marketing practices, breastfeeding in public
17. breastfeeding support: interaction of helpers with family as well as program development and implementation
18. why is BF so difficult that moms need help?: #1-unrealistic expectations #2-lack of timely interventions
19. When do moms usually quit breastfeeding? 10 days following d/c
20. International Code of Marketing Breastmilk Substitutes: international health policy framework to regulate the
marketing of breastmilk substitutes to protect breastfeeding
published by WHO
written in response to marketing activities that were promoting formula feeding over breastfeeding
21. World Breastfeeding Trends Initiative is intended to: track, assess, and mon- itor the implementation of the
global strategy at the country and sub country level
22. what contributes to low rates of exclusive breastfeeding globally?: caregiv- er and societal beliefs favoring
mixed feeding
hospital practices and policies that don't support breastfeeding lack of support
aggressive promotion of formula or substitutes inadequate maternity leave
lack of knowledge
23. How to support exclusive breastfeeding: Increase hospital and health system capacity including revitalizing,
, expanding, and institutionalizing the baby-friendly hospital initiative in health systems
Provide community based strategies including communication campaigns tailored to the local context
Strengthen the monitoring, enforcement, and legislation related to "The Code" and subsequent resolutions.
Enact at least 6 months paid maternity leave
Invest in training and capacity building in breastfeeding protection, promotion, and support
24. Alveoli: milk producing cells
25. nipple ducts have how many pores: 3-5
26. do all humans have prolactin?: yes!
27. what 2 hormone pathways are involved in making milk?: oxytocin and pro- lactin
28. prolactin levels: dependent on nipple stimulation (stroking) not decreased by stress
go up and down in between nursing
29. Oxytocin: influenced by nipple stretching (proper latch) temporarily affected by
stress
30. Feeding within the first 2 hours of life can do what to milk: significantly increase milk supply by day 4
31. Receivers of Knowledge believe: Believe all Authority tells the truth like to learn the right answer
and repeat it to the teacher
focus on teaching the right way and do return demo
32. Subjective Knowers: Knowers who depend entirely on internal resources for valuing and knowing
intuition and feelings trust
other women support groups
33. Procedural Knowers: Seek information from a variety of sources like evidence
limit personal stories
1. What point does baby blues occur in the pp period? first few days after birth
2. What point in the pp period does baby blues occur? first few days after birth
3. What point in the pp period does pp depression occur? gradually in the first year
4. What point in pp does pp panic disorder occur? 3-4 weeks
5. pp panic disorder characteristics: difficulty breathing, extreme anxiety, dizzi- ness, tremors, shaking
6. dysphoric milk ejection reflex (D-MER): a cluster of symptoms that happen in the first 30-120 seconds of milk
flow (symptoms: sadness, depression, anxiety, irritability, and restlessness
7. How many deaths occurred in 2015 in the neonate period?: 2.7 million
8. What was the number one cause of deaths in the neonate period in 2015?-
: pneumonia and diarrhea
9. How much would it cost to scale up to do everything to prevent neonate deaths?: less than 6 billion
worldwide
10. First 1,000 days campaign: includes 270 days of pregnancy up to 2 years worldwide and includes
breastfeeding
11. What are the characteristics of baby blues?: crying for no reason, irritability, anger, impatience’s, restlessness,
anxiety, exhaustion, insomnia, appetite distur- bances
12. Women who do not breastfeed are at a greater risk for which 5 things?: MI and metabolic syndrome
breast, endometrial and ovarian cancer
13. How much does your risk decrease for hypertension, diabetes and cardiac disease if you BF for at least a
,year?: 10-15%
14. 3 strategies that WHO and UNICEF set out to increase BF initiation and du- ration: Breastfeeding Promotion,
Breastfeeding Protection, Breastfeeding Support 2x more likely when all 3 are present
15. breastfeeding promotion according to WHO and UNICEF: focuses on advan- tages of breastfeeding on a
personal, community, country or global level
16. breastfeeding protection: focuses on govt, manufacturer and social respon- sibility to assure breastfeeding's
ability to compete with commercial interests, ad- dresses improper marketing practices, breastfeeding in public
17. breastfeeding support: interaction of helpers with family as well as program development and implementation
18. why is BF so difficult that moms need help?: #1-unrealistic expectations #2-lack of timely interventions
19. When do moms usually quit breastfeeding? 10 days following d/c
20. International Code of Marketing Breastmilk Substitutes: international health policy framework to regulate the
marketing of breastmilk substitutes to protect breastfeeding
published by WHO
written in response to marketing activities that were promoting formula feeding over breastfeeding
21. World Breastfeeding Trends Initiative is intended to: track, assess, and mon- itor the implementation of the
global strategy at the country and sub country level
22. what contributes to low rates of exclusive breastfeeding globally?: caregiv- er and societal beliefs favoring
mixed feeding
hospital practices and policies that don't support breastfeeding lack of support
aggressive promotion of formula or substitutes inadequate maternity leave
lack of knowledge
23. How to support exclusive breastfeeding: Increase hospital and health system capacity including revitalizing,
, expanding, and institutionalizing the baby-friendly hospital initiative in health systems
Provide community based strategies including communication campaigns tailored to the local context
Strengthen the monitoring, enforcement, and legislation related to "The Code" and subsequent resolutions.
Enact at least 6 months paid maternity leave
Invest in training and capacity building in breastfeeding protection, promotion, and support
24. Alveoli: milk producing cells
25. nipple ducts have how many pores: 3-5
26. do all humans have prolactin?: yes!
27. what 2 hormone pathways are involved in making milk?: oxytocin and pro- lactin
28. prolactin levels: dependent on nipple stimulation (stroking) not decreased by stress
go up and down in between nursing
29. Oxytocin: influenced by nipple stretching (proper latch) temporarily affected by
stress
30. Feeding within the first 2 hours of life can do what to milk: significantly increase milk supply by day 4
31. Receivers of Knowledge believe: Believe all Authority tells the truth like to learn the right answer
and repeat it to the teacher
focus on teaching the right way and do return demo
32. Subjective Knowers: Knowers who depend entirely on internal resources for valuing and knowing
intuition and feelings trust
other women support groups
33. Procedural Knowers: Seek information from a variety of sources like evidence
limit personal stories