Another thing to consider is that the problem may be the baby's not the
mother's. As in Torticollis where the baby doesn't want to turn his head
one way or keeps his head turned one way most of the time. These are the
babies who seem to always be looking past one shoulder to one side
rather than holding the head straight out. This is missed by many
doctors, nurses, and LCs. You can tell these babies by how they hold
their heads to one side while you are changing the diaper or weighing
them. Most babies keep their heads looking straight out from their
chest, not turned to one side. These little ones will often refuse to
nurse one side or will do cradle hold one side and "have to" be football
or clutch held on the other side. The less liked side then drops
production which changes the taste as someone else wrote.
Kathy Eng, BSW, IBCLC
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