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Wed, 27 Jun 2007 22:06:18 +0100 |
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The first link is a video clip - is this the one you mean?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_6640000/newsid_6644700/6644725.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6613229.stm
It can be a very successful way of helping a mother and her baby. And babies like it
Beth one of the mothers in the video described it in an article
##So what is Biological Nurturing and how does it relate to breastfeeding? If I were a baby, I’d describe it as "having really comfy cuddles. When my really comfy cuddles are with Mummy, if I fancy a snack I can cruise over to the buffet." ##
Helen Butler
LLL GB
> This sounds like Dr Suzanne Coulson's work on biological nurturing
> http://www.biologicalnurturing.com/
>
> This is research-based and draws on a lot of what is known about the
> biological, endocrinological and emotional connection between a
> mother and an infant - breastfeeding is at the interface of all these
> aspects, but it is also done with formula feeding mothers to enhance
> mothering and bonding.
>
> It is very hand off. Mother is indeed semi or fully reclined.
>
> This whole approach is in direct contrast to much of traditional
> teaching about positioning when feeding - there are books and
> leaflets which have very prescriptive rules about sitting with your
> back straight, your arms in a certain position, your knees raised
> (feet on a stool or even telephone books), bringing the baby on.
>
> BN is much more baby-led, and it is more about holding and relating
> and loving and enjoying than actual feeding....in our experience in
> the UK, where this approach is gaining a lot of fans, the most
> comfortable and effective feeding can indeed happen with BN, and it
> is very empowering to women, especially to those who have had a
> distressing birth experience. It also works with mothers and babies
> who have not been feeding well - it is genuinely therapeutic in this
> way.
>
> I would say BN is currently more influential with us who are not
> healthcare professionals - we have never trained our workers to be
> hands on, and in fact I have never touched a mother and baby pair in
> this way (I am *not* saying this should never be done - it's just not
> the way we do it in our work).
>
> Some maternity units - a very few so far - are incorporating BN into
> how they support mothers as of course it sits very well with skin to
> skin which is more common than it used to be.
>
> Heather Welford Neil
>
> NCT bfc, tutor, UK
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