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Fri, 14 Apr 2006 08:58:35 EDT |
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I am looking for answers to a frustrating situation at work.
A full term baby born vaginally to a primip mother breastfeed well right
after delivery. Than this baby became tired and not interested in feeding for a
good 8 hours. I had the mom hand express her colostrum onto the baby's lips
and use skin to skin. He appeared very mucousy so I told her to continue
with the expressing and wait. By the night time, now 12-15 hours old, the baby
had a dusky spell and was brought into the nursery to be observed. He still
was not interested in feeding but went out to mother for attempts. The
following day he had another dusky spell after spitting up mucous and colostrum.
He was now on an oxygen desaturation monitor and was dropping his O2 levels.
The pediatrician ordered that the baby be fed formula to see what the baby
would do. The first nurse who received these orders only gave a few sips and
the baby promptly vomited but the pediatrician wanted the baby to breastfeed
first and than follow with supplements of formula each time. The baby
tolerated some of the supplements and vomited and dropped his O2 stats on others.
(I was off this day.) The next day the baby was sent for an Upper GI and
the diagnosis was severe reflux. The mother was being discharged but her baby
had to stay to be monitored and the pediatrician continued the order to
breastfeed and follow with formula. The mom was given a pump and obtained 15 cc
on her fist pumping.
I asked the pediatrician (an elderly gentleman) why he was ordering the
formula supplements. I know he was not happy about me questioning his orders.
He told me he wanted to see what the baby would do with more volume since she
didn't have any milk yet. I pointed out that she did but this made him angry.
I observed this baby breastfeed beautifully and than I had the mother pump
and her volume was increasing so I asked the staff to call and see if they
could use the mother's expressed milk to supplement the baby. That evening the
baby had a sever spell and was admitted to the Special Care Nursery.
I don't understand this thinking and I am looking to this group for any
answers.
Sorry for the long post.
Ann Perry, RN IBCLC
Boston, MA
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