Hola my long -lost lactation friends. Apparently I'd make a lousey
witness protection program participant LOL. I have received some
wonderfully loving and warm emails and welcome more. Many of you
remember me as being a very vocal Lactet-er, LLLI, IBCLC, attachment
parenting advocate, and public health voice and then dropping off the
face of the earth several years back. I'm writing to tell you what
happened...
Much to my dismay, after the birth of my third child (who was a twin
but I lost his sister at 22 wks), I developed serious, life-threatening
symptoms that were misdiagnosed for several years inspite of my being a
persistent pain as a patient. Eventually I was correctly diagnosed as
having two brain tumors requiring two brain surgeries (and Cushings
Disease--that pituitary is OH SO important--don't forget
hyperprolactinemia can be a sign of pituitary tumors!) The process
nearly tore my family and all relationships apart, but thankfully I
have a wonderful dh and three attachement parented (breastfed for years
each) boys. In addition, I had the support of my UU churches and MOST
of my professional organizations, including the APHA. We are now
working and living in the Dominican Republic (after moving through
three states and two countries in four years due to my dh's work
situation). I have for the most part regained my normal self, lost over
90lbs (Cushings does a number on the body and mind) and see
opportunities everywhere.
Breastfeeding in the Dominican Republic is a STEEP uphill battle with
an exceptionally low breastfeeding rate. Although right now, lactation
it is not my primary focus in employment (I'm a UCLA-educated PhD in
Public Health with an MPH in Behavioral Sciences and Health Ed), I do
spend a significant amount of time helping with breastfeeding (6 years
as a LLLL, 7+ as an IBCLC and 9 years of lactating have that effect).
On a daily basis, I come home shaking my head at how many poor families
are getting "hooked" into formual or sabotaged out of breastfeeding.
The annual per capita income here is about $7000 USD and while many
women say they want to start out breastfeeding, the poorest seem to
view it as something only to be done if one can't afford formula (same
thing my grandmother said in the US back in the 40s when she had my
mother). I have LOTS of pix (all jpgs) if anyone wants to see them and
you may just sneak peek them on my MySpace acct with my aol address
name as the part following the /. Life in the DR (from my perspective)
is hard on women. I have lots of details as to what I mean by that but
any of you who have been here will know what I mean.
If any of you have questions as to how Cushings' impacts lactation and
fertility, I'd be happy to answer those too. As always, I keep my
Control of Communicable Diseases book on hand and love acting as a
public health resource. Diptheria is running around on the SE part of
the island right now along with coxsacki, strep and the tail end of a
Dengue Fever epidemic (which I had the misfortune of personally
experiencing).
¡Buena Salud y Paz (Good Health and Peace)!
Dr. Chris Hafner-Eaton
Juan Dolio, Republica Dominicana
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