Dear Friends:
Mothers imprint (for want of a better word) on behaviors around birth; they
are learning what to do to keep the baby alive. To illustrate, I believe that
the ubiquitous presence of baby buckets as standard parts of iinfant care has
to do with hospital policies that babies are not to be carried, but instead,
wheeled around in fish tanks. Mothers see this, and copy the behavior at home.
I am wondering if the increase of mothers pumping and bottle-feeding has to
do with the routine use of technology in labor. If women see that the baby
won't come out without the use of a variety of machines (fetal monitors, uterine
monitors, cardiac monitors and pulse oximeters), and the baby comes out and
goes on a warming table (another elaborate machine), why should she even think
or expect that breastfeeding could work without a machine?
Learning by modeling is very subtle, and very powerful in the first few days
postpartum, for mother as well as for baby.
Just wondering................
warmly,
Nikki Lee RN, MS, Mother of 2, IBCLC, CCE
Adjunct Faculty, Union Institute and University, Lactation Program
Film Reviews Editor, Journal of Human Lactation
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