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Date: | Thu, 3 Nov 2005 18:39:42 -0500 |
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I also see lots of pump abusing moms such as the ones that Pam Hirch describes for similar
reasons. It is so strange to me that women would willingly put themselves on the path of huge
amounts of unecessary pumping when I have so many others with low supply that really do it only
because they want to be able to breastfeed and would love to dump the pumping as soon as
possible. I probably don't understand it because I tend towards laziness whenever possible
myself. Why work harder when you don't have to?
Is it hoarding behavior that creates the urge to have the freezer full of milk? I can't tell you how
many heartbroken women called when we had the blackout in New York two years ago about the
freezer of milk that was defrosting.
I'm wondering about some differences between her population and my population of moms. I see
more plugged ducts and blebs in my pump abusers than mastitis. Most of the mastitis cases I see
started with cracked nipples and a baby that was not draining the breast well (with or without
pumping). In fact, I can't think of a pump-abuser in the last year that did develop mastitis. Is it
the Christina Smillie/Mona Gabbay drain em dry approach? Is it just random chance of exposure
in the hospital to nasty bugs? And maybe this has been a good year in Manhattan hospitals and
the nasty bugs are under control unlike two years ago when every woman I saw seemed to have
nipples rotting off from staph if she had the least bit of nipple cracking? Is there some other
differences between our moms?
I would love to have the wealth of a Bill Gates to dispense to answer the questions that we still
have about how to enable more women to breastfeed comfortably and successfully. Seems to me
if he could dispense enough money for Rx for Survival currently showing on PBS that features
some of the many interventions that prevent child death, that he could also be persuaded to take
on the one intervention proven to have at least as much if not more impact on child survival than
those featured on the PBS show.
Best regards, Susan Burger.
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