Sunday, December 22, 2024

‘It’s a controversial topic’: Data shows tongue-tie procedures have skyrocketed in 30 years

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As an exhausted first-time mum, Galen Elliott says she felt “like her world exploded” when she was told there was a potential problem with her newborn.

Despite her years of work as a Brisbane midwife, it was a different story when it involved her own baby.

Ms Elliott was seeing a lactation consultant who pinpointed the issue — Elke had a minor tongue-tie.

“I work with postnatal mums, but [it is different] to actually be in the experience of being completely sleep deprived … and wanting to do everything right,” she says.

Ms Elliott was told her baby, Elke, had a minor tongue-tie.(Supplied: Galen Elliott)

A tongue-tie is when the tissue under the tongue restricts its movements and functions. 

In young babies it can impact their latch and ability to suck when breastfeeding, which may lead to low weight gain, according to Queensland Health.

A GP can suggest a frenotomy, which is a surgical procedure where the lingual frenulum under the tongue — the tie — is released so that the tongue can move more easily.

In Ms Elliot’s case, in addition to working with her lactation consultant, she was referred to a chiropractor who offered exercise options to help release some of the tightness the tie was causing, eliminating the need for a procedure.

But for many parents, navigating what the best option is for their family can be daunting.

“I think everybody would have a story around [tongue-ties] and it is a controversial topic,” Ms Elliott says.

A shot of a baby, taken from above, as he lays in his mum's arms.

A tongue-tied baby may have issues breastfeeding.(Supplied: Galen Elliott)

Medicare data shows increase in claims related to tongue-tie releases

Brisbane-based GP and researcher Pamela Douglas believes there is a “serious problem with overdiagnosis and overtreatment” of tongue-ties in Australia.

Research, which Dr Douglas was involved in, found the rate of claims for Medicare frenotomy items increased from 1.22 per 1,000 people in 2006 to 6.35 per 1,000 in 2016 for children aged zero to four-years-old.

She’s concerned parents are being “frightened” by warnings from health professionals that their baby will suffer a range of consequences, including orthodontic problems, snoring and sleep disturbance, if a tongue-tie is not released. 

“It’s very often the case that parents get this kind of well-meaning, but quite frightening advice that if they don’t follow through, their baby will be negatively impacted,” Dr Douglas says.

However, an Australian study, published last year, found that — while there was an increase in referrals for tongue-ties between 2014 and 2018 — there was no evidence of a significant increase in the number of releases.

Medicare data shows the number of claims for frenotomy items rose from 1,487 in 1995 to 9,720 in 2023. 

The most claims were made in 2017 with 11,304.

A woman sits on a verandah smiling and holding a baby.

Pamela Douglas says parents can be frightened into believing their child needs the procedure.(Supplied: Amanda Crocetti)

Dr Douglas says the increase over time is “not consistent with any sort of meaningful increase in congenital abnormality”.

“The reason why we’ve moved into such overdiagnosis and overtreatment, I think, is because clinical breastfeeding support still remains a research frontier,” she says.

Tongue-tie releases in public hospitals, or those done privately by dentists, are not captured in the Medicare data.

Putting mums ‘in the driver’s seat’

There is currently no formal accreditation for health professionals performing tongue-tie releases.

When a baby has a tongue-tie, breastfeeding mothers may experience nipple pain, low milk supply, blocked ducts, mastitis or notice the nipple looks pinched when the baby comes off. 

A woman coaches a breastfeeding mother in a private room.

As a lactation consultant, Rebecca Cavallaro assesses a baby’s tongue function.(Supplied)

As a private-practice lactation consultant in Brisbane, Rebecca Cavallaro sees herself as a “breastfeeding detective”.

When a mother comes to her, suspecting their baby may have a tongue-tie, Ms Cavallaro says the first thing she does is assess their tongue function to determine whether surgical intervention is necessary.

Lactation consultants do not have the ability to diagnose a tongue-tie, but can help address breastfeeding difficulties.

She says some parents may be looking for a “quick fix”.

“The truth is, for a lot of understandably desperate and frustrated parents, they’re looking for a solution,” Ms Cavallaro says.

“I try my very best to make sure that mum is in the driver’s seat of that decision-making.”

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