Dear Friends:
As I understand it, the notions of foremilk ( a sample of milk taken
before the feed) and hindmilk ( a sample of milk taken after the feed) came from
the dairy industry. Babies actually never get either, according to this
definition.
Fat content in milk varies with the feeding frequency; someone posted
somewhere about the analogy of hot water in an older house. One has to open the
hot water faucet and let the water run for a long time to get hot water up
to the shower on the second floor for the first person taking a shower in the
morning. The second person taking a shower right after the first doesn't have
to run the water as long to get the warmth.
Fat in milk is similar the hot water in that analogy; if baby fed
minutes ago, there is a relatively high level of fat in the milk. If baby fed hours
and hours ago, it will take some time at breast (and multiple MERs) to bring
up the fat content.
As there is no representative sample of human milk, which is so variant,
how can we know what nutrients are available?
I wish that all texts with the descriptions of foremilk ("like skim
milk") and hind-milk ("the dessert") would vanish. All these notions seem to
do is worry mothers; the basic idea is to put baby to breast. Whatever is in
the breast at that moment is perfect. In this framework, when during a feed,
does the milk switch over to being hindmilk?
I never understood the bit about bio-engineering, where the milk stands,
the cream is taken off and given to baby to increase rate of weight gain.
Wouldn't a fatty meal make a baby take less volume? Wouldn't the calories of a
high-fat, low volume feed or a lower fat, high volume feed be roughly
equivalent? Can someone help me understand this better?
warmly,
Nikki Lee RN, MS, Mother of 2, IBCLC, CCE
Maternal-Child Adjunct Faculty Union Institute and University
Film Reviews Editor, Journal of Human Lactation
Support the WHO Code and the Mother-Friendly Childbirth Initiative
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