But what it can do—and what it has done—is ensure that when a family seeks help, the professionals they meet are no longer strangers to each other. They share a foundation. A vocabulary. A commitment that lactation care is never just about milk—it is about bodies, minds, relationships, and systems working as one.

Within four hours, without leaving her room, Maria receives coordinated care: pain management, positioning support, a feeding plan using expressed milk via a supplemental nursing system, and a referral for a pediatric dentist for a possible frenotomy. The social worker stops by to ask about her emotional state—not as an afterthought, but as a scheduled part of the protocol.

In a sense, they were. The PDF had become that script. By 2023, the Core Curriculum for Interdisciplinary Lactation Care PDF had been downloaded over 150,000 times—translated into Spanish, French, and Mandarin by volunteer teams. It was adopted by 40 nursing schools, 12 medical residencies, and 6 dental programs. The World Health Organization cited it as a model for integrated infant feeding support in its 2022 guideline update.