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Breastfeeding—Starting Out Right
by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC
Breastfeeding is the natural, physiologic way
of feeding infants and young children, and human milk is the milk made
specifically for human infants. Formulas made from cow’s milk or soybeans
(most formulas, even “designer formulas”) are only superficially
similar, and advertising which states otherwise is misleading. Breastfeeding should be
easy and trouble free for most mothers. A good start helps to ensure
breastfeeding is a happy experience for both mother and baby.
The vast majority of mothers are perfectly capable of breastfeeding
their babies exclusively for about six months.
In fact, most mothers produce more than enough milk.
Unfortunately, outdated hospital routines based on bottle feeding still predominate
in too many health care institutions and make breastfeeding difficult,
even impossible, for too many mothers and babies. For breastfeeding
to be well and properly established, a good start in the early few
days can be crucial. Admittedly, even with a terrible start, many mothers
and babies manage.
The trick to breastfeeding is getting the baby to latch on well.
A baby who latches on well, gets milk well. A baby who latches on poorly
has more difficulty getting milk, especially if the supply
is low. A poor latch is similar to giving a baby a bottle with a nipple
hole that is too small—the bottle is full of milk, but the baby
will not get much. When a baby is latching on poorly, he may also cause
the mother nipple pain. And if he does not get milk well, he will usually
stay on the breast for long periods, thus aggravating the pain. Unfortunately anyone can say that
the baby is latched on well, even if he isn’t. Too many people who should
know better just don’t know what a good latch is. Here are
a few ways breastfeeding can be made easy:
1. A proper latch is crucial to success. This
is the key to successful breastfeeding . Unfortunately, too
many mothers are being "helped" by people who don’t
know what a proper latch is. If you are being told your two day old’s
latch is good despite your having very sore nipples, be skeptical,
and ask for help from someone else who knows. Before you leave
the hospital, you should be shown that your baby is latched on properly,
and that he is actually getting milk from the breast and that you
know how to know he is getting milk from the breast (open mouth wide—pause—close
mouth type of suck). See also the website www.thebirthden.com/Newman.html for
videos on how to latch a baby on (as well as other videos). If
you and the baby are leaving hospital not knowing
this, get experienced help quickly (see handout When Latching). Some
staff in the hospital will tell mothers that if the breastfeeding
is painful, the latch is not good (usually true), so that the mother
should take the baby off and latch him on again. This is not
a good idea. The pain usually settles, and the latch should
be fixed on the other side or at the next feeding. Taking
the baby off the breast and latching him on again and again only
multiplies the pain and the damage.
2. The baby should be at the breast immediately after birth. The
vast majority of newborns can be at the breast within minutes of birth.
Indeed, research has shown that, given the chance, many babies only
minutes old will crawl up to the breast from the mother’s abdomen,
latch on and start breastfeeding all by themselves. This process may
take up to an hour or longer, but the mother and baby should be given
this time together to start learning about each other. Babies who "self-attach" run
into far fewer breastfeeding problems. This process does
not take any effort on the mother’s part, and the
excuse that it cannot be done because the mother is tired after labour
is nonsense, pure and simple. Incidentally, studies have also shown
that skin-to-skin contact between mothers and babies keeps the baby
as warm as an incubator (see section on skin to skin contact). Incidentally,
many babies do not latch on and breastfeeding during this time. Generally,
this is not a problem, and there is no harm in waiting for the baby
to start breastfeeding. The skin to skin contact is good for
the baby and the mother even if the baby does not latch on.
Page: 1 | 2
Next: More ways to start breastfeeding right
Please see next page for the remainder of
this handout.
Handout #1. Breastfeeding—Starting Out Right. 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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