I am looking for the usual dosage reccomended for this product. I am working with a military mother who is VERY concerned that she will have enough milk available when she is deployed. Her deployment is not for several months, and her baby is only 2 weeks old. She will return to a regular shift on-base in about a month. After a long conversation with her, it sounds like her supply is just fine. Still, she is concerned. I have given her our standard reccomendations for pumping milk, and she has promised to call me back if she needs more help. Based on her demeanor and peristance (none of the LLLLs in her area answered the phone right away, so she tried the warm-line for my county) I am pretty confident that she will. Now, I must say that everything seems fine with mother and baby. I think she just needs to relax and wait a bit. Baby's weight is good, he has sufficient wets and bowel movements, they are nursing at least 12 times a day, etc. She nursed and pumped sucessfully for her older child (aged 4). Of course, I tried to calm her and let her know that she has PLENTY of time to store milk for her eventual deployment. Still, since her situation as a working mom is different from those I usually encounter, I understand her "gung-ho" attitude. She seems to feel the need to do something to get things hopping. In my experience with our Area Professional Liason, we reccomend Mother's Milk Tea, so I'm not sure what to reccomend with the liquid suppliment she has on hand. She would like to use what she has, if at all possible. I really don't think she needs any herbal help at this point, but I understand her need to DO SOMETHING PROACTIVE, given that she will eventually be deployed. My son was conceived on September 12, 2001. We were scheduled to leave for a belated mini-honeymoon on that day. Of course, we could not fly out then. After his birth, I felt the strong need to pump and store as much milk as possible. I was not returning to work, but I was terrified that there would be another terrorist attack, or a natural disaster, and that my son would need my milk if I were to die. I know, not a terribly logical thought. Still, the milk stored in the freezer eased my mind. Of course, I wound up giving myself a terrible case of over-supply by pumping so much. I had HUNDREDS of ounces of milk stored by the time he was a few months old. This mother's cncerns are so much more concrete than mine, but at least I have a frame of reference to understand her drive to store as much milk as possible. Also, does anyone know of any support groups for nursing military mothers? Any help would be greatly appreciated. She is working to protect the freedom of my children...the least I can do is help her to help her baby! *********************************************** To temporarily stop your subscription: set lactnet nomail To start it again: set lactnet mail (or digest) To unsubscribe: unsubscribe lactnet All commands go to [log in to unmask] The LACTNET mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software together with L-Soft's LSMTP(R) mailer for lightning fast mail delivery. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html