
Introduction
Finger feeding is a technique which allows you to feed the
baby without giving the baby an artificial nipple. Finger feeding
is also a method which helps train the baby to take the breast.
If you want to breastfeed successfully, it is better to avoid the
use of artificial nipples before your milk supply is well
established. Finger feeding may be used if:
- The baby refuses the breast for whatever
reason, or if the baby is too sleepy at the breast to nurse well. It
is also a very good way to wake up a sleepy baby.
- The baby does not seem to be able to latch on
to the breast properly, and thus does not get milk well. (If a
lactation aid can be used at the breast, why use finger feeding?)
- The baby is separated from the mother, for
whatever reason. However, in such a situation, a cup is probably a
better method of feeding the baby.
- Breastfeeding is stopped temporarily (there
are very few legitimate reasons to stop breastfeeding. See
You Can
Still Breastfeed).
- Your nipples are so sore that you cannot put
the baby to the breast. Finger feeding for several days may allow
your nipples to heal without causing more problems by getting the
baby used to an artificial nipple. Cup feeding is also more
appropriate in this situation and takes less time. This is only a
last resort. Proper positioning and a good latch help sore nipples
far more frequently than finger feeding (See
Sore Nipples).
Finger feeding is much more similar to
breastfeeding than bottle feeding is. In order to finger feed, the
baby must keep his tongue down and forward over the gums, the mouth
wide open (the larger the finger used, the better), and the jaw
forward. Furthermore, the motion of the tongue and jaw is similar to
what the baby does while feeding at the breast. Finger feeding is best
used to prepare the baby to take the breast.
Cup feeding is usually easier and faster when the mother is not
present to feed the baby.
Please Note:
If the baby is taking the breast, it is better by far to use
the lactation at the breast, if supplementation is truly necessary
(see Using a Lactation Aid).
Finger Feeding (best learned by
watching and doing)
- Wash your hands. It is better if the finger
nail on the finger you will use has been cut short, but this is not
necessary.
- It is best to position yourself and the baby
comfortably. The baby's head should be supported with one hand behind
his shoulders and neck, the baby should be on your lap, half seated,
and facing you. Any position which is comfortable, however, will do.
- You will need a lactation aid, made up of a
feeding tube (#5F, 36" long), and a feeding bottle with expressed
breast milk, sugar water, or, if necessary, formula, depending on the
circumstances. The feeding tube is passed through the enlarged nipple
hole into the fluid.
- Line up the tube so that it sits on the soft
part of your index (or other) finger. The end of the tube should line
up no further than the end of your finger. It is easiest to
grip the tube, about where it makes a gentle curve, between your thumb
and middle finger and then position your index finger under the tube.
If this is done properly, there is no need to tape the tube to your
finger.
- Using the finger with the tube, tickle the
baby's lips lightly, until the baby opens up his mouth enough to allow
your finger to enter. If the baby is very sleepy, but needs to be fed,
the finger may be gently insinuated into his mouth. Generally, the
baby will begin to suckle even if asleep, and receiving liquids will
then awaken him.
- Insert your finger with the tube so that the
soft part of your finger remains upwards. Keep your finger as flat as
possible. Usually the baby will begin sucking on the finger, and allow
the finger to enter quite far. The baby will not usually gag on your
finger even if it is in his mouth quite far, unless the baby is full
or used to bottles.
- Pull down the baby's chin, if his lower lip is
sucked in.
- The technique is working if the baby is
drinking. If feeding is very slow, you may raise the bottle above the
baby's head. Try to keep your finger straight, flattening the baby's
tongue. Try not to point your finger up, but keep it flat, thus
keeping down the baby's tongue, and working the lower jaw forward.
- The use of finger feeding with a syringe to
push milk into the baby's mouth, is, in my opinion, too difficult and
definitely not more effective than simply using a bottle with
the nipple hole enlarged and the tube coming from it.
If you are having trouble getting the baby to
latch on to or to suckle at the breast, remember that a ravenous baby
can make the going very difficult. Take the edge off his hunger by
using the finger feeding technique for a minute or so. Once the baby
has settled a little, and sucks well on your finger (usually only a
minute or so), try offering the breast again. If you still encounter
difficulty, do not be discouraged. Go back to finger feeding and try
again later in the feed or next feeding. This technique usually
works. Sometimes several days, or on occasion a week or more, of
finger feeding are necessary, however.
If you are leaving the hospital finger feeding
the baby, make an appointment with the clinic within a day or so of
discharge. The earlier the better.
Once the baby is taking the breast, he may
still require the lactation aid to supplement for a period of time.
Although the baby may take the breast, the latch can still be less
than ideal, and the suckle may still not be efficient enough to ensure
adequate intake.
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.
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