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Date: | Thu, 24 Nov 2011 09:19:28 +0200 |
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I think it is very unwise for lactation counsellors to advise a woman to
wait for a medical procedure such as this.
However, she should certainly investigate why she was told to stop
breastfeeding. If the chemicals used for anesthetic or for removal of the
mole are not safe for the babay (and don`t forget this lesion is very near
the nipple) she could focus on expressing and storing sufficient milk in the
days before the procedure, pumping and discarding the milk during the short
time that it takes for any medications to be excreted from her system, while
the baby gets her expressed milk - this will keep her supply going until she
can return to fully breastfeeding.
I have had this experience with clients whose babies rejected their milk
after dental treatment using local anasthetics so in future dental
treatment, they took that precaution and successfully resumed breastfeeding.
In those cases the effects of the dental treatment were unpredictable so the
women did not discard their pumped milk, just tried it a little at the time
to see if the baby was happy with it.
But any suggestion for this woman to delay removing the mole is
irresponsible. I hope it is totally benign or even an extra nipple, but it
is not up to us to make that diagnosis.
Wendy Blumfield
NCT Trained Prenatal Tutor/Breastfeeding Counsellor
Israel Childbirth Education Centre
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