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Date: | Wed, 20 Jul 2005 09:16:36 -0400 |
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Hello, All: I've worked with several moms over the years with one
involuted breast, all of whom successfully nursed babies well over a year
on essentially one breast. As Renee so succinctly put it, "if it ain't
broke, don't fix it". We were never able to discover why in each of these
mothers they were not producing milk in one breast. One mom in particular,
was very concerned about being "even" and struggled (and fought) with her
baby for 7 months before she finally gave in and accepted that she was
destined to be lop-sided. Her baby grew beautifully on that one breast and
they went on to happily nurse for 18 months.
I have always been very careful about pushing pumping and other technology
on mothers in these types of situations. I feel pumping contributes to her
feelings of failure as well as fosters obsession about how much milk she is
getting (or not). As long as baby is growing/developing normally, I
encourage the mother to enjoy the particular nursing relationship she and
her baby have developed. Who cares if it's different than what the books
say or what other mothers experience?
Pam Hirsch, RN,BSN,CLC
Clinical Lead, Lactation Services
Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital
Barrington, IL USA
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