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Date: | Tue, 10 Feb 2009 18:46:24 -0600 |
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gonneke wrote:
And, before and beyond listening: watch mom and her bodylanguage/facial expression as she takes baby to the breast. Some women do not ''complain'' of pain with words, but their bodies tell it for them. The little frown, the just lifting the shoulders by a cm, bending the back, clenching the teeth, .. all signs of pain and signal to re-latch
How true. I learned long ago not to ask a mom, "Does it hurt?" Instead I will ask, "How does it feel?" If her response it something like "Great!" and I see no signs of injury or wincing etc. as she nurses, I will take it to mean there is no discomfort (although I try to inject somewhere in the conversation that pain isn't normal and needs to be evaluated to see if the latch needs to be "refined")
On the other hand, a response like, "Not too bad" or "It's OK" (usually said a little tentatively) I take it as a clear sign that further evaluation is needed. Often the "Not too bad" results from her assumption that soreness is an expected part of learning to nurse or perhaps she struggled with soreness with a previous baby and this one doesn't hurt as much as the last one!
Winnie Mading
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