Kate Sharp and I were the originators of the pump about every waking
hour for 24-48 hours variant of powerpumping (it was named by Leigh Anne
O'Connor). It was designed for mothers whose infants are in NICU or
nonlatching. To make it possible to do, we recommend they do it over a
weekend or when they have someone to help them with everything else,
keep the pump in the living area (or wherever they spend their time),
and use it every time they have a few minutes. For full term infants,
cleaning the kit every 4-6 hours, for preterm, having 2 kits to minimize
the barrier of cleaning everything is important too.
If mom already has a bf baby, I usually recommend supplementing at the
breast and expressing after bf (and possibly between feedings if baby
typically sleeps a long time), for exactly the reasons you mention, Laurie.
And no, we don't have any research on effectiveness. It started as a way
to problem solve pumping and help moms get milk removed frequently, to
mimic the baby cluster feeding for a day or two to increase milk
production. It's not going to work if the pump isn't effective, so we
need to do that work first.
Catherine Watson Genna BS, IBCLC NYC www.cwgenna.com
On 6/13/2017 7:16 PM, Laurie Wheeler wrote:
> Hi Debra and all,
>
> Of course, the cornerstone of milk production, and when mothers are trying
> to produce more, is "More frequent nursing or pumping." I add to that the
> word "effective" breastfeeding or pumping, and that means an effective
> latch, often breast compression, and hands on pumping / hand expressing.
>
> My question is about the evidence for power pumping. I've seen the
> technique described in various ways, from pumping 10 min on/10 min off for
> an hour, to pumping every 1 for several hours. What I am wondering is if
> there is evidence to show that this is more effective at increasing milk
> production than the usual regimen of feeding and/or expressing effectively
> 8-10 x per day.
>
> Personally, I find that many mothers have trouble implementing even the
> "usual" measures, when they are trying to deal with a preterm or early term
> infant, a baby who is not latching, frequent weight checks etc. Or maybe
> it's a mother who is back to work and that is a realy challenge any way you
> look at it. And so I am hesitant to recommend something that has not been
> shown to even work. Has it?
>
> Laurie Wheeler, RN, MN, IBCLC
> Mississippi Gulf Coast, USA
>
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