>In all my years of doing this, I have never used an SNS to latch a
>nonlatching baby. The mechanics of the SNS require a latch to operate, thus
>baby must be latched to something, along with the SNS, to create the pressure
>gradient necessary.
I would have agreed, until a 5 week-old non-nurser some years ago. *I*
could get him to latch, but the mom's flat-nippled, barely-colored, nearly
featureless hemispheres confounded the baby and mom alike.
When I had run out of tricks and mom was planning to quit trying, I said,
"Look, we have nothing to lose. Let's try some wild and crazy things." I
outlined some possibilities and she chose the least outrageous first - an
SNS for a non-latching baby. The baby latched right on. That little
whisker of tubing gave him a "latch here" tactile signal that perhaps had
been missing before. It may have helped the mother orient, too.
It's some years later and I might try other things first, now (could a baby
self-attach to a nearly featureless breast??), but by golly it worked then.
They nursed for at least a year.
--
Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC, LLLL a week behind in Ithaca, NY
www.wiessinger.baka.com
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