BreastfeedingAll
AboutBreastfeeding - Starting Out Right
Breastfeeding - Starting Out Right
by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC
Breastfeeding is the natural,
physiologic way of feeding infants and young children milk, and
human milk is the milk made specifically for human infants. Formulas
made from cow’s milk or soy beans (most of them) are only
superficially similar, and advertising which states otherwise is
misleading. Breastfeeding should be easy and trouble free for most
mothers. A good start helps to assure breastfeeding is a happy
experience for both mother and baby.
The vast majority of mothers are perfectly capable of breastfeeding
their babies exclusively for four to six months. In
fact, most mothers produce more than enough milk.
Unfortunately, outdated hospital routines based on bottle feeding still
predominate in many health care institutions and make
breastfeeding difficult, even impossible, for some mothers and babies.
For breastfeeding to be well and properly established, a good early
few days can be crucial. Admittedly, even with a terrible start, many
mothers and babies manage.
The trick to breastfeeding is getting the baby to latch on well. A
baby who latches on well, gets milk well. A baby who latches on poorly
has difficulty getting milk, especially if the supply is low. A poor
latch is similar to giving a baby a bottle with a nipple hole which is
too small - the bottle is full of milk, but the baby will not get
much. When a baby is latching on poorly, he may also cause the mother
nipple pain. And if he does not get milk well, he will usually stay on
the breast for long periods, thus aggravating the pain. Here are a few
ways breastfeeding can be made easy:
1. The baby should be
at the breast immediately after birth.
The vast majority of
newborns can be put to the breast within minutes of birth. Indeed,
research has shown that, given the chance, babies only minutes old
will often crawl up to the breast from the mother’s abdomen, and
start breastfeeding all by themselves. This process may take up to an
hour or longer, but the mother and baby should be given this time
together to start learning about each other. Babies who
"self-attach" run into far fewer breastfeeding problems.
This process does not take any effort on the mother’s
part, and the excuse that it cannot be done because the mother is
tired after labor is nonsense, pure and simple. Incidentally, studies
have also shown that skin to skin contact between mothers and babies
keeps the baby as warm as an incubator.
2. The mother and baby
should room in together.
There is absolutely
no medial reason for healthy mothers and babies to be separated
from each other, even for short periods. Health facilities which have
routine separations of mothers and babies after birth are years behind
the times, and the reasons for the separation often have to do with
letting parents know who is in control (the hospital) and who is not
(the parents). Often bogus reasons are given for separations. One
example is the baby passed meconium before birth. A baby who passes
meconium and is fine a few minutes after birth will be fine and does
not need to be in an incubator for several hours’
"observation."
There is no evidence that mothers who are separated from their babies
are better rested. On the contrary, they are more rested and less
stressed when they are with their babies. Mothers and babies learn how
to sleep in the same rhythm. Thus, when the baby starts waking for a
feed, the mother is also starting to wake up naturally. This is not as
tiring for the mother as being awakened from deep sleep, as she often
is if the baby is elsewhere when he wakes up.
The baby shows long before he starts crying that he is ready to feed.
His breathing may change, for example. Or he may start to stretch. The
mother, being in light sleep, will awaken, her milk will start to flow
and the calm baby will be content to nurse. A baby who has been crying
for some time before being tried on the breast may refuse to take the
breast even if he is ravenous. Mothers and babies should be encouraged
to sleep side by side in the hospital. This is a great way for mothers
to rest while the baby nurses. Breastfeeding should be relaxing, not
tiring.
3. Artificial nipples
should not be given to the baby.
There seems to be
some controversy about whether "nipple confusion" exists.
Babies will take whatever method gives them a rapid flow of fluid and
may refuse others that do not. Thus, in the first few days, when the
mother is producing only a little milk (as nature intended), and the
baby gets a bottle (as nature intended?) from which he gets rapid
flow, he will tend to prefer the rapid flow method. You don’t have
to be a rocket scientist to figure that one out, though many health
professionals, who are supposed to be helping you, don’t seem to be
able to manage it. Nipple confusion includes not just the baby
refusing the breast, but also the baby not taking the breast as well
as he could and thus not getting milk well and /or the mother getting
sore nipples. Just because a baby will "take both" does not
mean that the bottle is not having a negative effect. Since there are
now alternatives available if the baby needs to be supplemented (see Using
a Lactation Aid) why use an artificial nipple?
4. No restriction on
length or frequency of breastfeedings.
A baby who drinks
well will not be on the breast for hours at a time. Thus, if he is, it
is usually because he is not latching on well and not getting the milk
which is available. Get help to fix the baby’s latch, and use
compression to get the baby more milk (see Breast
Compression). This, not a pacifier, not
a bottle, not taking the baby to the nursery, will help.
5. Supplements of
water, sugar water, or formula are rarely needed.
Most supplements
could be avoided by getting the baby to take the breast properly and
get the milk that is available. If you are being told you need to
supplement without someone having observed you breastfeeding, ask for
someone to help who knows what they are doing. There are rare
indications for supplementation, but usually supplements are suggested
for the convenience of the hospital staff. If supplements are
required, they should be given by lactation
aid, not cup, finger feeding, syringe or bottle. The best
supplement is your own colostrum. It can be mixed with sugar water if
you are not able to express much at first. Formula is hardly ever
necessary in the first few days.
6. A proper latch is
crucial to success.
This is the key to
successful breastfeeding. Unfortunately, too many mothers are being
"helped" by people who don’t know what a proper latch is.
If you are being told your two day old’s latch is good despite your
having very sore nipples, be skeptical, and ask for help from someone
who knows.
Before you leave the hospital, you should be shown that your baby is
latched on properly, and that he is actually getting milk from the
breast and that you know how to know he is getting milk from the
breast (open - pause - close type of suck). If you and the baby
are leaving hospital notknowing this, get help quickly.
7. Free formula
samples and formula company literature are not gifts.
There is only one
purpose for these "gifts" and that is to get you to use
formula. It is very effective, and very unethical, marketing. If you
get any from any health professional, you should be wondering about
his/her knowledge of breastfeeding and his/her commitment to
breastfeeding. "But I need formula because the baby is not
getting enough!" Maybe, but, more likely, you weren’t given
good help and the baby is simply not getting your milk well. Get good
help. Formula samples are not help.
Under some circumstances, it may be impossible to start breastfeeding
early. However, most medical reasons (maternal medication, for
example) are not true reasons for stopping or delaying
breastfeeding, and you are getting misinformation. Get
good help. Premature babies can start breastfeeding much, much earlier
than they do in many health facilities. In fact, studies are now quite
definite that it is easier for a premature baby to breastfeed
than to bottle feed. Unfortunately, too many health professionals
dealing with premature babies do not seem to be aware of this.
This article may
be copied and distributed without further permission
About the
Author
JACK NEWMAN
graduated from the University of Toronto medical school as a pediatrician in 1970. He
started the first hospital-based breastfeeding clinic in Canada in 1984 at Toronto's
Hospital for Sick Children. He has been a consultant with UNICEF for the Baby Friendly
Hospital Initiative in Africa, and has published articles on the subject of breastfeeding
in Scientific American and several medical journals. Dr. Newman has practiced as a
physician in Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa.