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Date: | Tue, 21 Jun 2011 10:41:06 -0400 |
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In response to Sonya:
Cathy Genna has posted previously some nice studies that debunk this notion. It is not having an overabundance of milk that causes slow growth. All the studies show that when babies take in a greater volume of milk, they grow faster. What can happen, however, is that babies may be able to feed from one breast at a time from a mother with a high supply. This then tamps down the supply because the breast is being drained half as often as it would if she were feeding from both sides. At some point, the supply may drop to the point where the baby may actually need the second breast. Or, what I see very frequently is the mother is told to sleep train her baby. So, she might feed the baby only four or five times per 24 hours, which means each breast is only getting drained two or three times a day. Then the supply collapses. The vast majority of cases of failure to thrive that I see among 3-6 month olds is simply because the baby is not being fed frequently and the breasts are not being drained frequently enough to sustain the supply. Nancy Morbacher's piece on the Magic Number in Clinical Lactation does a great job of explaining the physiology of this.
Best regards, Susan E. Burger, MHS, PhD, IBCLC
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