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Is My Baby Getting Enough Milk?
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by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC
Breastfeeding mothers frequently
ask how to know their babies are getting enough milk. The breast
is not the bottle, and it is not possible to hold the breast up to
the light to see how many ounces or milliliters of milk the baby drank. Our
number obsessed society makes it difficult for some mothers to accept
not seeing exactly how much milk the baby receives. However,
there are ways of knowing that the baby is getting enough. In
the long run, weight gain is the best indication whether the baby is
getting enough, but rules about weight gain appropriate for bottle
fed babies may not be appropriate for breastfed babies.
Ways of knowing
1. Baby's nursing is characteristic. A baby
who is obtaining good amounts of milk at the breast sucks in a very
characteristic way. When a baby is getting milk (he is not getting
milk just because he has the breast in his mouth and is making sucking
movements), you will see a pause at the point of his chin after he
opens to the maximum and before he closes his mouth, so that one suck
is (open mouth wide--> pause-->close mouth). If you wish
to demonstrate this to yourself, put your index or other finger in
your mouth and suck as if you were sucking on a straw. As you
draw in, your chin drops and stays down as long as you are drawing
in. When you stop drawing in, your chin comes back up. This
same pause that is visible at the baby's chin represents a mouthful
of milk when the baby does it at the breast. The longer the
pause, the more the baby got. Once you know about
the pause you can cut through so much of the nonsense breastfeeding
mothers are being told—like feed the baby twenty
minutes on each side. A baby who does this type of sucking
(with the pauses) for twenty minutes straight might not even take the
second side. A baby who nibbles (doesn't drink) for 20 hours
will come off the breast hungry. The website
www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html has
videos that show this pause in the baby’s chin.
2. Baby's bowel movements. For the first
few days after delivery, the baby passes meconium, a dark green, almost
black, substance. Meconium accumulates in the baby's gut during
pregnancy. It is passed during the first few days, and by the
third day, the bowel movements start becoming lighter, as more breast
milk
is taken. Usually by the fifth day, the bowel movements have
taken on the appearance of the normal breast milk stool. The
normal breast milk stool is pasty to watery, mustard colored, and usually
has little odor. However, bowel movements may vary considerably
from this description. They may be green or orange, may contain
curds or mucus, or may resemble shaving cream in consistency (from
air bubbles). The variations in color do not mean something
is wrong. A baby who is breastfeeding only, and is
starting to have bowel movements that are becoming lighter by day 3
of life, is doing well.
Without
becoming obsessive about it, monitoring the frequency and quantity
of bowel motions is one of the best ways, next to observing the baby’s
drinking, (see above, and videos at
www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html)
of knowing if the baby is getting enough milk. After the first
three to four days, the baby should have increasing bowel movements
so that by the end of the first week he should be passing at least
two to three substantial yellow stools each day. In
addition, many infants have a stained diaper with almost each feeding. A
baby who is still passing meconium on the fourth or fifth day of
life, should be seen at the clinic the same day. A baby who
is passing only brown bowel movements is probably not getting enough,
but this is not very reliable.
Some
breastfed babies, after the first three to four weeks of life, may
suddenly change their stool pattern from many each day, to one every
three days or even less. Some babies have gone as long as 15
days or more without a bowel movement. As long as the
baby is otherwise well, and the stool is the usual pasty or soft, yellow
movement, this is not constipation and is of no concern. No
treatment is necessary or desirable, because no treatment
is necessary or desirable for something that is normal.
Any
baby between five and 21 days of age who does not pass at least one
substantial bowel movement within a 24 hour period should be seen at
the breastfeeding clinic the same day. Generally, small, infrequent
bowel movements during this time period mean insufficient intake. There
are definitely some exceptions and everything may be fine, but it is
better to check.
3. Urination. With six soaking wet (not
just wet) diapers in a 24 hours hour period, after about 4-5 days of
life, you can be reasonably sure that the baby is getting a lot of
milk (if he is breastfeeding only). Unfortunately,
the new super dry "disposable" diapers often do indeed feel
dry even when full of urine, but when soaked with urine they are heavy. It
should be obvious that this indication of milk intake does not apply
if you are giving the baby extra water (which, in any case, is unnecessary
for breastfed babies, and if given by bottle, may interfere with breastfeeding). The
baby's urine should be almost colourless after the first few days,
though occasional darker urine is not of concern.
During
the first two to three days of life, some babies pass pink or red urine. This
is not a reason to panic and does not mean the baby is dehydrated. No
one knows what it means, or even if it is abnormal. It is undoubtedly
associated with the lesser intake of the breastfed baby compared with
the bottle fed baby during this time, but the bottle feeding baby is not the
standard on which to judge breastfeeding. However, the appearance
of this color urine should result in attention to getting the baby
well latched on and making sure the baby is drinking at
the breast. During the first few days of life, only
if the baby is well latched on can he get his mother's milk. Giving
water by bottle or cup or finger feeding at this point does not fix
the problem. It only gets the baby out of hospital with urine
that is not red. Fixing the latch and using compression will
usually fix the problem (See
Handout B: Protocol to Increase Breastmilk
Intake by the Baby). If relatching and breast compression do not
result in better intake, there are ways of giving extra fluid without
giving a bottle directly (handout #5 Using a Lactation Aid). Limiting
the duration or frequency of feedings can also contribute to decreased
intake of milk.
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Next: Things that are NOT ways of
knowing
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Please see next page for the remainder of this
handout.
Handout #4. Is My Baby Getting Enough?Revised
January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
This handout may be copied and distributed without further permission, on the condition that it is not
used in any context in which the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated.
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