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Sun, 16 May 2010 03:39:13 -0400 |
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Thanks for the references, Anne. As you write, "...all 3 studies looking at milk transfer in healthy, term newborns who nurse well demonstrate a decrease in milk transfer with the shield."
You have my wholehearted support in pointing out that introducing a shield without seeing to it that follow-up is in place is not responsible practice. I would also agree that they are almost never introduced for a solid, indisputable reason in the first few days of life. Baby not attaching to the breast? Skin-to-skin contact and leisurely pace while someone goes and feeds the baby.! Mother sore? Fix the real problem! Engorgement making nipple flat? Try RPS and let the baby have a go afterwards! Problems persisting beyond the first few days need a closer look and you may well see there is a role for nipple shields.
I have a question, having not read these articles in full myself, at least not in the last 15 years. I see that the three studies on milk transfer in healthy term newborns are from 1980, 1987 and 1990. I can't remember when the ultra-thin silicone shields replaced the thick red rubber sombreros, and when I first begain working as a midwife just over 20 years ago, I even encountered the blown glass shields onto which a latex bottle teat was fixed. Do the studies specify the kinds of shields used?
I am very definitely *not* claiming that the thin shields we use today are safe or that they do not affect milk transfer or breast emptying. If I believed that, I wouldn't worry about follow-up, and I worry a lot about follow-up. I am wondering whether there is any evidence at all about the thin shields compared to nipple coverings we *know* are ineffective and/or dangerous.
Rachel Myr
Kristiansand, Norway
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