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Thu, 17 Feb 2011 09:47:12 +0200 |
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Another case of the baby getting thrown out with the bath-water!
The original hypothesis of the issue of milk becoming fatter and richer as
it flows was formulated by Chloe Fisher who ran a daily breastfeeding clinic
in Oxford. Working not only with new mothers but also with mothers who
could drop into her clinic at any time, she observed what a lot of us who
were working at that also experienced.
That the advice to give both breasts at every feed if not exactly the "ten
minutes each side" doctrine was leading to a common problem: "I have loads
of milk, I`m spurting all over the place, but my baby is not gaining weight
and my doctor says it must be because my milk is not good enough".
This was followed by advice to top up with formula and even cornflour!
With this nonsense being spouted at every mother whose baby did not keep up
to the weight graphs, Chloe sought an explanation for low weight gain in
spite of plentiful milk supply.
When milk was examined in the hospital laboratory it was found that there
was not an even consistency throughout the feed and indeed the milk that
flowed copiously throughout the first few minutes was more watery - and that
is why babies do not need supplementary water/juice/tea etc - and that as
the baby continued sucking the milk became more fatty providing more
calories.
I have often sat with mothers who worry that as the feed progresses, the
baby tires and often gets frustrated at having to work harder to get to that
fattier milk.
Jack Newman`s compression technique is invaluable here and one can see
immediately that as the mother presses down on the milk glands, the baby
gets a mouthful of milk and resumes sucking with enthusiasm.
However we have to explain to mothers that there is not any "division" in
the breast that separates the milk and that they need to adjust the feeding
patterns to what suits baby and themselves.
There are no hard and fast rules and what suits one mother and baby doesn`t
suit another. Also when one talks about "emptying the breast" there is not
really any such thing as a totally empty breast because (unlike bottles)
there is a miraculous refilling process which proves the point that the more
the baby/babies take, the more the mother produces, a point that I emphasize
when preparing mothers to breastfeed twins.
If only breastfeeding was presented as less mechanical, perhaps mothers
could just sit back and relax and enjoy feeding their babies.
Wendy Blumfield
Israel Childbirth Education Centre
NCT Trained Prenatal Tutor Teacher/Breastfeeding Counsellor
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