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Still More Breastfeeding Myths
- Women with flat or inverted nipples cannot
breastfeed. Not true! Babies
do not breastfeed on nipples, they breastfeed on the breast. Though
it may be easier for a baby to latch on to a breast with a prominent
nipple, it is not necessary for nipples to stick out. A proper start
will usually prevent problems and mothers with any shaped nipples can
breastfeed perfectly adequately. In the past, a nipple shield was frequently
suggested to get the baby to take the breast. This gadget should not
be used, especially in the first few days! Though it may seem a solution,
its use often result in poor feeding and severe weight loss, and makes
it even more difficult to get the baby to take the breast. (Handout
#8 Finger Feeding). If the baby does not take
the breast at first, with proper help, he will often take the breast
later. Breasts also change in the first few weeks, and as long as the
mother maintains a good milk supply, the baby will usually latch on,
sooner or later.
- A woman who becomes pregnant must stop
breastfeeding. Not true! If
the mother and child desire, breastfeeding can continue. There are women
who continue nursing the older child even after delivery of the new
baby. Many women do decide to stop nursing when they become pregnant
because their nipples are sore, or for other reasons, but there is no
rush nor medical necessity to do so. In fact, there are often good reasons
to continue. The milk supply may decrease during pregnancy, but if the
baby is taking other foods, this is not a problem.
- A baby with diarrhea should not breastfeed.
Not true! The best treatment for a
gut infection (gastroenteritis) is breastfeeding. Furthermore, it is
very unusual for the baby to require fluids other than breastmilk. If
lactose intolerance is a problem, the baby can receive lactase drops,
available without prescription, just before or after the feeding, but
this is rarely necessary in breastfeeding babies. Get information on
its use from the clinic. In any case, lactose intolerance due to gastroenteritis
will disappear with time. Lactose free formula is not better than breastfeeding.
Breastfeeding is better than any formula.
- Babies will stay on the breast for 2 hours
because they like to suck. Not true!
Babies need and like to suck, but how much do they need? Most babies
who stay at the breast for such a long time are probably hungry, even
though they may be gaining well. Being at the breast is not the same
as drinking at the breast. Latching the baby better onto the breast
allows the baby to nurse more effectively, and thus spend more time
actually drinking. You can also help the baby to drink more by expressing
milk into his mouth when he is no longer swallows on his own (Handout
#15 Breast Compression). Babies younger than
5-6 weeks often fall asleep at the breast because the flow of milk is
slow, not necessarily because they have had enough to eat.
- Babies need to know how to take a bottle.
Therefore a bottle should always be introduced before the baby refuses
to take one. Not true! Though
many mothers decide to introduce a bottle for various reasons, there
is no reason a baby must learn how to use one. Indeed, there is no great
advantage in a baby's taking a bottle. Since Canadian women are supposed
to receive 26 weeks maternity leave, the baby can be started eating
solids before the mother goes back to her outside work. The baby can
even take fluids or solids that are quite liquidy off a spoon. At about
6 months of age, the baby can start learning how to drink from a cup,
and though it may take several weeks for him to learn to use it efficiently,
he will learn. If the mother is going to introduce a bottle, it is better
she wait until the baby has been nursing well for 4-6 weeks, and then
give it only occasionally. Sometimes, however, babies who take the bottle
well at 6 weeks, refuse it at 3 or 4 months even if they have been getting
bottles regularly (smart babies). Do not worry, and proceed as above
with solids and spoon. Giving a bottle when breastfeeding is going badly
is not a good idea and usually makes the breastfeeding even more difficult.
For your sake and the baby's do not try to "starve the baby into
submission". Get help.
- If a mother has surgery, she has to wait
a day before restarting nursing. Not
true! The mother can breastfeed immediately after surgery, as
soon as she is up to it. Neither the medications used during anaesthesia,
nor pain medications nor antibiotics used after surgery require the
mother to avoid breastfeeding, except under exceptional circumstances.
Enlightened hospitals will accommodate breastfeeding mothers and babies
when either the mother or the baby needs to be admitted to the hospital,
so that breastfeeding can continue. Many rules that restrict breastfeeding
are more for the convenience of staff than for the benefit of mothers
and babies.
- Breastfeeding twins is too difficult to
manage. Not true! Breastfeeding
twins is easier than bottle feeding twins, if breastfeeding is going
well. This is why it is so important that a special effort should be
made to get breastfeeding started right when the mother has had twins
(Handout #1 Breastfeeding -- Starting Out Right).
Many women have breastfed triplets exclusively. This obviously takes
a lot of work and time, but twins and triplets take a lot of work and
time no matter how the infants are fed.
- Women whose breasts do not enlarge or enlarge
only a little during pregnancy, will not produce enough milk.
Not true! There are a very few women
who cannot produce enough milk (though they can continue to breastfeed
by supplementing with a lactation aid). Some of these women say that
their breasts did not enlarge during pregnancy. However, the vast majority
of women whose breasts do not seem to enlarge during pregnancy produce
more than enough milk.
- A mother whose breasts do not seem full
has little milk in the breast. Not
true! Breasts do not have to feel full to produce plenty of milk.
It is normal that a breastfeeding woman's breasts feel less full as
her body adjusts to her baby's milk intake. This can happen suddenly
and may occur as early as two weeks after birth or even earlier. The
breast is never "empty" and also produces milk as the baby
nurses.
- Breastfeeding in public is not decent.
Not true! It is the humiliation and
harassment of mothers who are nursing their babies that is not decent.
Women who are trying to do the best for their babies should not be forced
by other people's lack of understanding to stay home or feed their babies
in public washrooms. Those who are offended need only avert their eyes.
Children will not be damaged psychologically by seeing a women breastfeeding.
On the contrary, they might learn something important, beautiful and
fascinating. They might even learn that breasts are not only for selling
beer. Other women who have left their babies at home to be bottle fed
when they went out might be encouraged to bring the baby with them the
next time.
- Breastfeeding a child until 3 or 4 years
of age is abnormal and bad for the child, causing an overdependent relationship
between mother and child. Not true!
Breastfeeding for 2-4 years was the rule in most cultures since the
beginning of human time on this planet. Only in the last 100 years or
so has breastfeeding been seen as something to be limited. Children
nursed into the third year are not overly dependent. On the contrary,
they tend to be very secure and thus more independent. They themselves
will make the step to stop breastfeeding (with gentle encouragement
from the mother), and thus will be secure in their accomplishment.
- If the baby is off the breast for a few
days (weeks), the mother should not restart breastfeeding because the
milk sours. Not true! The milk
is as good as it ever was. Breastmilk in the breast is not milk or formula
in a bottle.
- After exercise a mother should not breastfeed.
Not true! There is absolutely no reason
why a mother would not be able to breastfeed after exercising. The study
that purported to show that babies were fussy feeding after mother exercising
was poorly done and contradicts the everyday experience of millions
of mothers.
- A breastfeeding mother cannot get a permanent
or dye her hair. Not true!
- Breastfeeding is blamed for everything.
True! Family, health professionals,
neighbours, friends and taxi drivers will blame breastfeeding if the
mother is tired, nervous, weepy, sick, has pain in her knees, has difficulty
sleeping, is always sleepy, feels dizzy, is anemic, has a relapse of
her arthritis (migraines, or any chronic problem) complains of hair
loss, change of vision, ringing in the ears or itchy skin. Breastfeeding
will be blamed as the cause of marriage problems and the other children
acting up. Breastfeeding is to blame when the mortgage rates go up and
the economy is faltering. And whenever there is something that does
not fit the "picture book" life, the mother will be advised
by everyone that it will be better if she stops breastfeeding.
Questions? (416) 813-5757 (option 3) or newman@globalserve.net
Handout #13. Still More Breastfeeding Myths
Revised January 2000
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC
May be copied and distributed without further permission
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