Germaine said:
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<<Hi All, there has been discussion lately about not supplementing for
weight loss until 12%. Does anyone have any parameters, research or
information about this in their practise. thank you Germaine Lambergs>>
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When, oh when are we going to start looking at the whole picture and not
just a number on a scale or a percentage? Some of our pediatricians and
nurses have started saying to moms in the hospital, "Oh, your baby is down 7%
today, we are going to really have to watch it." I actually had a mom come
see me, and when I asked what the baby's weight was in the doctor's office,
she said, "I don't know. He just told me she was down 10% and I needed to
see you."
What do I mean by looking at the whole picture? Well, how many times has
the baby peed & pooped in the first couple of days? How much fluid did the
mom receive? Was she induced or augmented with pitocin? How much edema
does she have? Maybe the baby has an overabundance of fluid and is just
recalibrating back to normal? Was the birth weight accurate? Is this really
a breastfeeding issue, or is it related to something else?
In the olden days (and yes, I have lived thru them), we used to weigh
diapers to determine baby output. I think we need to go back to that. Then we
can decide if 7% or 9% or the "magic" 10%, or even the 12% Germaine is
mentioning is even valid.
It's 48 hours. Baby weighed 8# at birth. He is now down to 7-2 (11%).
Panic city. Call the doctor! Call the nurse!! Call the lady with the
alligator purse (full of formula)!. But did ANYONE look at the output? Did
anyone look at the baby? Is he dry? Is he lethargic? Has anyone watched the
breastfeeding technique? Now -- if this mom was induced/augmented and has
a lot of edema, the possibility exists that her milk is not going to "come
in" for 96 hours or thereabouts. Has she done RPS? Is she hand
expressing with pumping? How often is baby going to breast?
So -- a very long answer to a very short question. And the short answer
is, "stop looking at numbers and look at the baby." And if your
observations tell you that the baby isn't doing well regardless of the numbers -- then
the second short answer is "Feed the baby!"
Jan Barger, RN, MA, IBCLC, FILCA
Lactation Education Consultants
Wheaton IL
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