breast feeding problems



breast feeding

breast feeding

The neutrality of this article is disputed.
Please see the discussion on the talk page.

Wean redirects here: see #Weaning.
Breastfeeding an infant

Breastfeeding is the process of a woman feeding an infant or young child with milk from her breasts, usually directly from the nipples. Babies have a sucking urge that enables them to take in the milk, provided there is a good 'latch' (i.e. correct orientation between the woman and the baby), a normal frenulum, and a milk supply.

Breast milk is generally considered to be the best nutrition source for children (see exceptions below).citation needed] Some mothers do not breastfeed their children, either for personal or medical reasons. Some viruses, such as HIV and HTLV-1, may be passed through the breast milk, and may therefore preclude breastfeeding. Some medicines also transfer through breast milk, hence many medications are labelled as unsafe for use while breastfeeding, and the breastfeeding mother and her physician must carefully weigh the risks and benefits. However, most medicines are transferred in very small amounts and are considered safe to take during breastfeeding; therefore most women are not precluded from breastfeeding, and most doctors, governments, and health organisations promote the practice.citation needed]

Many governmental strategies and international initiatives have promoted breastfeeding as the best method of feeding a child in his or her first year and beyond, as does the World Health Organization (WHO),[1] the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP),[2] and many others.

Contents

  • 1 Beginning lactation
  • 2 The let-down reflex
    • 2.1 Afterpains
  • 3 Benefits
    • 3.1 Benefits for the infant
    • 3.2 Benefits for the mother
    • 3.3 Bonding
    • 3.4 Recommendations and research
  • 4 Difficulties with breastfeeding
    • 4.1 Breast refusal
    • 4.2 Medical conditions of the infant
    • 4.3 Medical conditions of the mother
    • 4.4 When breastfeeding may be harmful to the infant
    • 4.5 Health and diet
    • 4.6 Signs of a well-fed newborn
    • 4.7 Signs of an underfed baby
    • 4.8 Signs of breasts over-producing milk
  • 5 Feeding options and requirements
    • 5.1 Expression
    • 5.2 Infant formula
    • 5.3 Tandem, extended, and shared breastfeeding
  • 6 Breastfeeding method
    • 6.1 Feeding and positioning
    • 6.2 Breast and nipple pain
    • 6.3 Weaning
  • 7 History of breastfeeding
    • 7.1 Developing alternatives
    • 7.2 Breastfeeding in Japan
    • 7.3 Breastfeeding in Canada
    • 7.4 Breastfeeding in Cuba
    • 7.5 Publicity, promotion and law
      • 7.5.1 Developing nations
      • 7.5.2 Breastfeeding in public
        • 7.5.2.1 USA
        • 7.5.2.2 UK
        • 7.5.2.3 Canada
        • 7.5.2.4 Cultural conflicts
    • 7.6 Recent global uptake
  • 8 Lactation without pregnancy
  • 9 See also
  • 10 References
    • 10.1 Numbered references
    • 10.2 Unnumbered references
    • 10.3 Other well-known authors on breastfeeding
    • 10.4 Website references
    • 10.5 Infant pain and breastfeeding
    • 10.6 Health risks of formula feeding
  • 11 External links

Beginning lactation

When the baby sucks, a hormone called oxytocin starts the milk flowing from the alveoli, through the ducts (milk canals) into the sacs (milk pools) behind the areola and then into the baby's mouth
Main article: Breast milk

Throughout the last two trimesters of pregnancy a woman's body produces hormones which stimulate the growth of the milk duct system in the breasts:

  • Progesterone -- influences the growth in size of alveoli and lobes. Progesterone levels drop along with oestrogen levels after birth, triggering the onset of copious milk secretion [3]
  • Oestrogen -- stimulates the ductule system to grow and become specific. Estrogen levels drop at delivery and remain low for the first several months of breastfeeding. [3] (This is also why it is recommended that breastfeeding moms avoid oestrogen-based birth control methods while they are planning to breastfeed. A spike in oestrogen levels compromises a mother's milk supply level)
  • Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH)
  • Luteinizing hormone (LH)
  • Prolactin -- contributes to the accelerated growth of the alveoli during pregnancy [4]
  • Oxytocin -- contracts the smooth muscle of the uterus during birth, after birth, and during orgasm. After birth, oxytocin contracts the smooth muscle layer of band-like cells surrounding the alveoli to squeeze the newly-produced milk into the duct system. Oxytocin is necessary for a let-down, or milk ejection reflex, to occur [4]
  • Human placental lactogen (HPL) -- released in large amounts by the placenta during pregnancy (beginning in the second month); appears to be instrumental in breast, nipple, and areola growth before birth [4]

By the fifth or sixth month of pregnancy, the breasts are sufficiently developed to produce milk (although it is also possible to induce lactation as described in a later section).

During the latter part of pregnancy, the woman's breasts enter into the Lactogenesis I stage, where the breasts are making colostrum (a thick, sometimes yellowish fluid), but high levels of progesterone inhibit most milk secretion and keep the volume “turned down”. It is considered medically normal for a pregnant woman to leak colostrum before her baby's birth, and also normal not to leak at all. Neither situation is an indicator of future milk production levels in the mother.

At birth, the delivery of the placenta results in a sudden drop in progesterone/oestrogen/HPL levels. This abrupt withdrawal of progesterone in the presence of high prolactin levels cues Lactogenesis II (copious milk production).

Prolactin blood levels rise when the breast is stimulated, and peak around 45 minutes later. They return to pre-breastfeeding levels about three hours afterwards. The release of prolactin triggers the cells in the alveoli to create milk. Some research [5] indicates that prolactin in milk is higher at times of higher milk production, and that the highest levels tend to occur between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m.

Other hormones (insulin, thyroxine, cortisol) are also involved, but their roles are not yet well understood. Although biochemical markers indicate that Lactogenesis II commences approximately 30-40 hours after birth, mothers do not typically begin feeling increased breast fullness (the sensation of milk "coming in") until 50-73 hours (2-3 days) after birth.

The colostrum is the first milk the baby receives; it contains higher amounts of white blood cells and antibodies than mature milk, and is especially high in immunoglobulin A (IgA), which coats the lining of babies' immature intestines, helping to prevent germs from invading baby's system. Secretory IgA also works to help prevent food allergies. [6]

After a baby has been nursing for 3-4 days, the colostrum in the breast slowly begins the process of changing into mature breast milk over the next two weeks. [3]

During pregnancy and the first few days postpartum, milk supply is hormonally driven. This is the endocrine control system. After milk supply has been more firmly established, Lactogenesis III begins - the autocrine (or local) control system.

At this stage, milk production follows the law of supply and demand: the more milk removed from the breast, the more milk the breast will produce. Thus milk supply is strongly influenced by how often the baby feeds and how well it is able to transfer milk out of the breast. Low supply can often be traced to:

  • not feeding or pumping often enough
  • inability of the infant to transfer milk effectively caused by, among other things:
    • jaw or mouth structure deficits
    • poor latching technique
  • rare maternal endocrine disorders
  • hypoplastic breast tissue
  • a metabolic or digestive inability in the infant, rendering it unable to utilise the milk it receives
  • inadequate calorie intake or malnutrition of the mother

Research on mothers who express their milk [7] [8] indicates that for most women the more times per day a mother expresses her milk, the more milk she produces. Ongoing research [9] shows that more fully draining the breasts also increases the rate of milk production.

The production, secretion and ejection of milk is called lactation. Feeding at least once every two to three hours helps to maintain the milk supply. For most women, a target of eight nursing sessions/pumping sessions per 24 hours seems to keep a milk supply high not only during the early months of lactation, but especially past the fourth month. [10] It is not at all uncommon for newborn infants to nurse far in excess of this amount: 10 to 12 nursing sessions per 24 hours is the comparative norm, while some may even nurse 18 times in the same time frame.citation needed] Feeding a baby on demand, which may mean nursing many times more than the recommended minimum, is the best way to maintain milk production and ensure the baby's needs for milk and comfort are being met satisfactorily.citation needed]

The exact properties of breast milk are not entirely understood, but the nutrient content of mature milk is relatively consistent and draws its ingredients from the mother's food supply and the nutrients in her bloodstream at the time of feeding. If that supply is inadequate, content is obtained from the mother's bodily stores. (Some studies estimate that a woman uses an extra 500 calories per day simply producing milk for her offspring.) The exact composition of breast milk varies from day to day, and even hour to hour, depending on both the manner in which the baby nurses and the mother's food consumption and environment, so the ratio of water to fat fluctuates. Foremilk, the milk released at the beginning of a feed, is watery, low in fat and high in carbohydrates compared with the creamier hindmilk which is increasingly released as the feed progresses. There is no sharp distinction between foremilk and hindmilk – the change is very gradual. Research from Peter Hartmann's group tells us that fat content of the milk is primarily determined by the emptiness of the breast -- the less milk in the breast, the higher the fat content. The breast can never be truly "emptied" since milk production is continuous.

The let-down reflex

The let-down reflex, also known as the milk ejection reflex, is caused by the release of the hormone, oxytocin. Oxytocin stimulates the muscles of the breast to squeeze out the milk. Breastfeeding mothers describe the sensation differently, with some feeling a slight tingling, some feeling immense amounts of pressure, some feeling slight pain/discomfort, and still others not feeling anything different.

The reflex is not always consistent, especially at first. The thought of nursing or the sound of any baby can stimulate the let-down reflex, causing unwanted leakage, or both breasts giving out milk when one infant is feeding. However, this and other problems often settle after two weeks of feeding. If the mother is in a stressed or anxious state of mind this can cause difficulties with breastfeeding.

Causes of a poor let-down reflex:

  • Sore or cracked nipples
  • Separation from the infant
  • A history of breast surgery

If a mother has trouble breastfeeding she can try different methods of assisting the let-down reflex. These include:

  • Feeding in a familiar and comfortable location
  • Massage of the breast or back
  • Warming the breast with a cloth or shower

Afterpains

The surge of oxytocin for triggering milk let-down also causes the uterus to subinvolute (contract down). Subsequently, during breastfeeding mothers can feel uterine contractions (pain ranging from period-like cramps to strong labour-like contractions). Afterpains can be more severe with second and subsequent babies. [11]

Benefits

The benefits of breastfeeding are both physical and psychological for both mother and child. Nutrients and antibodies are passed to the baby while hormones are released into the mother's system. The bond between baby and mother can also be strengthened during breastfeeding.

Benefits for the infant

Breast milk, when fed directly from the breast, is immediately available with no wait and is at body temperature.

Breast-fed babies have a decreased risk for several infant conditions including sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). The sucking technique required of the infant encourages the proper development of both the teeth and other speech organs. Sucking also has a beneficial role in the prevention of obstructive sleep apnea.

The many health benefits of breastfeeding have been well documented. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics policy statement, "Extensive research, especially in recent years, documents diverse and compelling advantages to infants, mothers, families, and society from breastfeeding and the use of human milk for infant feeding. These include health, nutritional, immunologic, developmental, psychological, social, economic, and environmental benefits."

Breast milk may help to lower the risk of or protect against:

  1. Diabetes
  2. Gastroenteritis
  3. Diarrhea
  4. Asthma
  5. Allergies
  6. Urinary tract infection
  7. Chest infection and wheezing
  8. Otitis media (ear infection)
  9. Obesity
  10. Autoimmune Thyroid Disease
  11. Necrotizing Enterocolitis
  12. Breast Cancer
  13. Crohn's Disease
  14. Bacterial Meningitis
  15. Rheumatoid Arthritis
  16. Hodgkins Disease
  17. Eczema
  18. Multiple Sclerosis

Breast milk also has various anti-infective factors. These include the anti malarial factor para amino benzoic acid (PABA), the anti amoebic factor BSSL, and lactoferrin (which binds to iron, inhibiting the growth of intestinal bacteria like E. Coli). Unlike human milk, the predominant protein in cow's milk is lactoglobulin. This is an important factor in allergy to cow's milk.

Breast milk also has in adequate amounts various factors for neuronal development like cystine, methionine and taurine.

Benefits for the mother

Breastfeeding also benefits the mother. It releases hormones that have been found to relax the mother and cause her to experience nurturing feelings toward her infant. Breastfeeding as soon as possible after giving birth increases levels of oxytocin which encourages the uterus to contract more quickly. This helps to decrease bleeding after the birth.

Mothers can find breastfeeding helps them return to their previous weights as the fat accumulated during pregnancy is used in milk production. Frequent and exclusive breastfeeding delays the return of menstruation and fertility known as lactational amenorrhoea. This allows for improved iron stores and the possibility of natural child spacing.

Breastfeeding mothers may enjoy many health benefits:

  1. Reduced Risk of Breast Cancer
  2. Reduced Risk of Ovarian Cancer
  3. Decreased Insulin Requirements in Diabetic Mothers
  4. Stabilization of Maternal Endometriosis
  5. Reduced Risk of Post-partum Hemorrhage
  6. Reduced Risk of Endometrial Cancer
  7. Reduced Risk of Osteoporosis
  8. Beneficial Effects on Insulin Levels of Mothers with PCOS

Mothers who breastfeed experience improved bone re-mineralisation after the birth, and a reduced risk for both ovarian and breast cancer both before and after menopause.

Bonding

The maternal bond may be strengthened through breastfeeding, with the hormonal releases strengthening the mother's nurturing feelings towards the child. Strengthening the maternal bond is very important; up to 80% of mothers suffer from some form of postpartum depression, though most cases are very mild. A secondary parent can support the mother in a variety of ways and is an important factor in successful breastfeeding.

Breastfeeding can also greatly affect the personal relationship between the partner and the child. While some partners may feel left out when the mother is feeding the baby, others may see the whole process as a chance to bond as a family. Breastfeeding, possibly alongside birth-related health problems, takes a lot of time. This may add pressure to the partner and the family, because the partner has to care for the mother and also perform tasks she would otherwise do. However, as partners are often very willing to give this support, this pressure can help to strengthen family bonds.

When looking after the child while the mother is away, an alternative caregiver may feed the child using expressed breast milk (EBM). Sometimes this may be impractical as the mother must produce and store enough milk to feed the child for the duration of her absence. If the two caregivers are separated, feeding the breast milk may also be awkward. These two situations may prompt the caregivers to use an alternative feeding method for the child either temporarily or permanently. However, a variety of breast pumps now on the market, both for sale and for rent, make it possible for working mothers to exclusively breastfeed their babies for as long as they wish.

Recommendations and research

The World Health Organization advises: "A vast majority of mothers can and should breastfeed, just as vast majority of infants can and should be breastfed. Only under exceptional circumstances can a mother's milk be considered as unsuitable for her infant. For those few health situations where infants cannot, or should not, be breastfed, the choice of the best alternative – expressed milk from the infant's own mother, breast milk from a healthy wet-nurse or a human-milk bank, or a breast milk substitute fed with a cup, which is a safer method than a feeding bottle or a teat – depends on individual circumstances. Infants who are not breastfed, for whatever reason, should receive special attention from the health and social welfare system since they constitute a risk group." [12]

Difficulties with breastfeeding

It is not uncommon for a mother and child to have difficulties breastfeeding in the beginning, but most of these problems resolve in the early weeks.

2-3 percent of women are unable to provide a full day's calories. It is not always known what causes insufficient milk supply, but extended separation, early supplementation with formula, birth and insufficient glandular tissue are known causes. Even among this small group, it is feasible to continue breastfeeding while supplementing with donated breastmilk or artificial baby milk. Many of these mothers breastfeed exclusively by using thin tubing taped to the breast to deliver the supplementary food. This is called a supplementary nursing system, or SNS.

Some anecdotal evidence indicates that mothers with PCOS may have difficulties with low milk supply, however it is unknown whether that is directly related to PCOS or related to other conditions such as insufficient glandular tissue or extended separation of mother and child at birth. The majority of women with PCOS are able to breastfeed their children successfully, with approximately 1/3 of women experiencing an oversupply.

While some may find it too problematic or choose not to attempt or continue breastfeeding for personal reasons, most women who have initial difficulties can go on to breastfeed successfully.

Breast refusal

Though babies have a natural sucking reflex, they still have to learn how to feed and may occasionally resist feeding from the breast. To establish breastfeeding firmly, it is important for the baby to be put to the breast soon after birth so that the baby is accustomed to feeding from the breast from the very beginning. The AAP policy on breastfeeding says: Delay weighing, measuring, bathing, needle-sticks, and eye prophylaxis until after the first feeding is completed.

Causes of breast refusal include:

  • Formula feeding, sometimes without the knowledge of the mother.
  • The use of artificial teats (nipples) or dummies leading to "nipple confusion"
  • Poor feeding technique
  • Over-handling after birth
  • Thrush in the baby's mouth [1] [2]
  • Distractions or interruptions during feeds
  • Long separations from the mother
  • Breathing difficulties, often caused by a common cold [3]
  • Swallowing difficulties, sometimes the painful result of ear or throat infections
  • Pain from surgery (most commonly circumcision), blood tests, vaccinations, and other procedures commonly carried out without anaesthesia [4] [5]

In later stages teething could be perceived by the mother as a hindrance to breastfeeding. While it is seen by some as a good time to wean the infant, teething difficulties can usually be overcome.

Medical conditions of the infant

Causes which inhibit an infant feeding include:

  • Difficulties latching onto the breast
  • Poor sucking reflex
  • Poor stamina
  • Medical conditions such as cleft palate
  • Ankyloglossia (tongue tie)
  • Hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia
  • Hypotonia, or "low-tone" infant disorder
  • Food allergy, which can cause an infant to react to food proteins in breast milk (rare). Infants are not actually allergic to breast milk itself.

Premature babies can have difficulties if their sucking reflex is still underdeveloped and if they tire during feeds.

For many sucking related feeding difficulties, the infant can receive proper nutrition by use of a Haberman Feeder, a special bottle with a carefully designed nipple that simulates breastfeeding. A supplemental nursing system can also aid breastfeeding in these situations.

Medical conditions of the mother

Many women with previous surgeries, abscesses and cancer can breastfeed successfully. However, damage to the breast tissue can cause problems or prevent manageable breastfeeding for women with history of breast surgery or infection. Cancer (particularly breast cancer) and chemotherapy treatments have also been shown to cause difficulties. Infectious diseases such as HIV (the virus causing AIDS) can be passed onto the infant. An HIV-positive mother breastfeeding an infant can, in some countries, be investigated for child abuse – a 1998 case in the U.S. resulted in the HIV-positive mother being reported to social services for her continued breastfeeding and non-treatment of the child for HIV [6]. The presence of herpes lesions on the breast is also contraindicative to breastfeeding.

Mastitis is inflammation of the breasts caused by the blocking of the milk ducts. Mastitis cause painful areas on the breasts or nipples and may lead to a fever or flu-like symptoms. It is not necessary to wean a nursling simply because of mastitis; in fact, nursing is the most effective way to remove the blockage and alleviate the symptoms, and is not harmful to the baby. Sudden weaning can cause or exacerbate mastitis symptoms.

When breastfeeding may be harmful to the infant

Breastfeeding may be harmful to the infant if the mother:

  • has HIV [13]
  • is taking certain medications that suppress the immune system
  • is taking certain medications which may be passed onto the child through the milk. The vast majority of medications are compatible with breastfeeding
  • has had excessive exposure to heavy metals such as mercury
  • uses potentially harmful substances such as cocaine, heroin and amphetamines. Substances such as caffeine, tobacco, and alcohol, while possibly harmful to the nursling if consumed in large quantities, are safe to use in moderation while breastfeeding (see below)

The amount of medicine transferred through breast milk depends on the amount of breast milk consumerd. This is maximal after the colostral and transitional phase.

The WHO advises mothers with Tuberculosis to continue breastfeeding. [14] TB is transmitted through the air, so the risk for the baby is the same with breast or bottle feeding. citation needed]

Infants with classic galactosemia cannot be breastfeed due to the lactose in breastmilk. [7]

Health and diet

Since the nutritional requirements of the baby must be satisfied solely by the breast milk when exclusively breastfeeding it is important for the mother to maintain a healthy lifestyle, especially a good diet. If the baby is large and grows quickly, the fat stores gained by the mother during pregnancy can be quickly depleted, and she may have trouble eating well enough to keep developing sufficient milk. The best diet is usually high in calories and other nutrients, following on from that in pregnancy. Consumption of 1,500-1,800 calories per day could coincide with a weight loss of 0.45kg (one pound) per week. [15] While mothers in famine conditions can produce milk with highly nutritional content, a malnourished mother may produce milk with decreased levels of vitamins A, D, B6 and B12. [16] She may also have a lower supply than well-fed mothers.

There are no foods which are absolutely contraindicated during lactation, although a baby may show sensitivity to particular foods in the mother's diet. Some breastfeeding advisers suggest mothers avoid certain gas producing food, such as beans, if the baby starts to develop colic or gas.citation needed]

Breastfeeding mothers must use caution if they smoke and therefore consume nicotine. Heavy use of cigarettes by the mother (more than 20 per day) has been shown to reduce the mother's milk supply and cause vomiting, diarrhoea, rapid heart rate, and restlessness in breastfeeding infants. Research is ongoing to determine whether the benefits of breastfeeding out-weigh the potential harm of nicotine in breast milk. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is more common in babies exposed to a smoky environment. [17] Breastfeeding mothers who smoke are counselled not to do so during or immediately before feeding their child. They are encouraged to seek advice to help them reduce their nicotine intake or quit.

Heavy alcohol consumption harms the infant, causing problems with the development of motor skills and decreasing the speed of weight gain. There is no consensus on how much alcohol may be consumed safely, but it is generally agreed that small amounts of alcohol may be occasionally consumed by a breastfeeding mother. Considering the known dangers of alcohol exposure to the developing fetus, those mothers wishing to err on the side of caution should restrict or eliminate their alcoholic intake.

Excessive caffeine consumption by the mother can cause irritability, sleeplessness, nervousness and increased feeding in the breastfed infant. Moderate use (one to two cups per day) usually produces no effect. Breastfeeding mothers are advised to avoid or restrict caffeine intake.

Cannabis is listed by the American Association of Pediatrics as a compound that transfers into human breast milk. Research demonstrated that certain compounds in marijuana have a very long half-life. [18] Cannabis exposure via the mother's milk during the first month postpartum appears to be associated with a decrease in infant motor development at one year of age.

Signs of a well-fed newborn

  • At least 8 breastfeeds every 24 hours (10-12 in 24 hours is more common in newborns)
  • Obviously swallowing during the feeds
  • Baby is allowed to determine the length of the feeding, which may be 10 to 20 minutes or longer, on one breast or two
  • No meconium faeces by day-5. "The normal breastmilk stool is pasty to watery, mustard coloured, and usually has little odour. 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 colour 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." [19]
  • At least three soiled nappies (diapers) in 24 hours, with stools at least 25mm across (the size of a U.S. quarter)
  • Five (5) to six (6) wet disposable diapers in 24 hours, or six (6) to eight (8) wet cloth diapers in 24 hours. (After one week of age) A good comparison tool for an adequately "wet" diaper is to pour three US Tablespoons of water into a dry diaper
  • Baby should be gaining at least 110-200 grams (4-7 ounces) per week after the fourth day of life. (Most infants lose 7 to 10 percent of their birth weight during the first week of life, and regain it again by the second week)
  • Thereafter gaining 100-200 grams per week

Baby's Age Average Weight Gain 0-4 months: 170 grams per week † 4-6 months: 113-142 grams per week 6-12 months: ‡ 57-113 grams per week † It is acceptable for some babies to gain 113-142 grammes (4-5 ounces) per week.

‡ The average breastfed baby doubles birth weight in 5-6 months. By one year, the typical breastfed baby will weigh about 2½ times birth weight. By two years, differences in weight gain and growth between breastfed and formula-fed babies are no longer evident.

Source: Mohrbacher N and Stock J. The Breastfeeding Answer Book, Third Revised ed. Schaumburg, Illinois: La Leche League International, 2003, pp. 148-149.

Signs of an underfed baby

  • Continues to lose weight after day-5
  • Below birth weight at day-14
  • Gains less than 120g per week after the first week, or less than 500g per month
  • Fewer than six wet nappies daily
  • Urine that is yellow and strong smelling
  • Infrequent dry, hard, green stools
  • Worried-looking face
  • Not alert or active for some periods daily
  • Unusually lethargic and sleepy
  • Weak cry

[11]

Signs of breasts over-producing milk

  • Baby gets uncomfortable, cries incessantly, is windy and has frequent green stools (maybe with mucus)
  • When feeding on one side, other breast leaks a lot of milk (beyond the first few weeks)
  • When baby pulls off of the nipple, milk squirts some distance
  • During feeding, mother hears a 'milk hitting the bottom of the stomach' sound
  • Baby seemingly in pain, for feeding stimulates bowel movements
  • Baby 'head-bangs' during feeds, arching its back, and pulling off the breast to protect its airway, perhaps dragging the nipple with it, then maybe refusing to feed
  • NOTE: With the fast rush of milk, the baby can swallow a lot of air as well as milk, which can make the baby think he/she is full

[11]

Feeding options and requirements

Exclusive breastfeeding means feeding a baby nothing but breast milk. Predominant or mixed breastfeeding means feeding breast milk along with some form of substitute – infant formula or baby food and even water, depending upon the age of the child. Babies feed differently with artificial teats than from a breast. When feeding from the breast, the tongue massages the milk out rather than sucking, and the nipple does not go as far into the mouth; when feeding from a bottle, an infant will suck harder. Therefore the advice is not to mix breastfeeding and bottle-feeding (or the use of a pacifier) until the baby is used to feeding from its mother. Orthodontic teats, which are generally slightly longer, can be used to better replicate the breast.

Exclusively breastfed infants feed, on average, 6-14 times a day. The requirement varies greatly among children. Newborns consume about 30 to 90 ml (1 to 3 US fluid ounces), and after the age of four weeks, babies consume about 120ml (4 US fluid ounces) per feed. Each baby is different, and as it grows the amount will increase. It is important to recognise the signs of a baby's hunger and it is advised that the baby should dictate the number, frequency, and length of each feed, based on the assumption that it knows how much milk it needs. The supply of milk in the breast is determined by the frequency and length of these feeds or the amount of milk expressed. The birth weight of the baby may affect its feeding habits, and mothers may be influenced by what they perceive its requirements to be. For example, a baby born small for gestational age may lead a mother to believe that her child needs to feed more than if it larger; they should, however, go by the demands of the baby rather than what they feel is necessary.

One limitation of breastfeeding is that it is harder to accurately measure the amount of food the baby consumes. Since a baby will normally feed to meet its own requirements, this is rarely a problem except when attempting to determine a cause for undernutrition. It is possible to guess output from wet and soiled nappies: 8 wet cloth or 5-6 wet disposable, and 2-5 soiled per 24 hours) suggests an acceptable amount of input for newborns older than 5-6 days old. After 2-3 months, stool frequency is a less accurate measure of adequate input as some normal infants may go up to 10 days between stools.

Expression

Manual breast pump

When direct breastfeeding is not possible a baby may still be fed breast milk. By expressing (artificially removing and storing) her milk, a mother can enable her child to be fed while she is away from the child. With expression through manual massage or the use of a breast pump the woman can draw out her milk and keep it in supplemental nursing system or a bottle ready for use. This bottle may be kept on the counter for up to seven hours, refrigerated for up to eight days or frozen for up to four months. Research suggests that antioxidant activity in expressed breast milk decreases over time [8] but it still remains in higher levels than in infant formula.

Expression can be used to maintain lactation, such as when the mother and child are separated for an extended period. If the baby is unable to feed, expressed milk can be fed through a nasogastric tube.

Expressed milk can also be used to help a mother who is having difficulty breastfeeding, such as when a newborn causes grazing and bruising or when an older baby grows teeth and bites the nipple (though the reaction of the mother to a bite - a jump and a cry of pain - is usually enough to discourage the child from biting again).

Some women donate their expressed breast milk (EBM) to others, either directly or through a hospital. Though some dislike the idea of feeding their own child with another person's milk, others appreciate the ability to give their baby the benefits of breast milk. Feeding an infant breast milk is more important in some situations than in others, such as for a premature baby. citation needed]

Infant formula

Expressed breast milk (EBM) or infant formula can be fed to an infant by bottle

The World Health Organization recommends that all mothers be encouraged to breastfeed.[1] Hospitals that are accredited by the World Health Organization are tolerant of formula feeding but do not offer it to infants who can be breastfed as feeding a new baby with formula undermines the establishment of breastfeeding.

If the decision is made not to feed the child breast milk, or if breastfeeding is not possible, then infant formula can be given to the infant, usually using a baby bottle. According to the WHO, infant formula is the last option for infant feeding as breastfeeding, expressed milk of the baby's own mother and the expressed milk of another lactating mother (donor) should all be tried before resorting to infant formula. Infant formula may also be introduced as a supplemental liquid drink to weaned babies. Because it is proportioned for human babies it may be seen as healthier than simply drinking the milk from another mammal. Dry-nursing or drinking the milk of another mammal has been associated with high infant mortality.

While it is inferior to breastfeeding, infant formula has been effectively marketed and promoted to new mothers as a modern, easy or convenient option to feeding a baby. A 2004 UK Department of Health survey showed that 34% of women incorrectly believe infant formula to be very similar to or the same as breast milk. [9] In 1979 the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) was formed to help raise awareness of such practices as supplementary feeding of new babies with formula, inappropriate promotion of baby formula and to help change attitudes that discourage or inhibit mothers from breastfeeding their babies.

Tandem, extended, and shared breastfeeding

Feeding two infants simultaneously is called tandem breastfeeding. The most common need for this is after the birth of twins whereby both babies are fed at the same time. It is not necessarily the case, however, that the appetite and feeding habits of both babies are the same. This leads to the complication of trying to feed each baby according to its own individual requirements while also trying to breastfeed them both at the same time.

In cases of multiple births with three or more children it is extremely difficult for the mother to organise feeding around the appetites of all of the babies. The breasts can produce a high quantity of milk, according to the demand placed upon them, and many mothers have been able to feed their infants successfully [10]. It is common, however, for the woman to use other alternatives.

Tandem breastfeeding is also convenient if a woman gives birth to a newborn while still feeding an older baby or child. Under these circumstances during the late stages of pregnancy the milk will change to colostrum for the benefit of the newborn. Some older nurslings will continue to feed even with this change while others may wean due to the change in taste.

Although some may find it controversial, some women breastfeed their offspring for as many as 3 to (rarely) 7 years from birth. This is referred to as extended breastfeeding. Supporters of extended breastfeeding say that all the benefits of human milk, both nutritional and emotional, continue for as long as a child nurses. Detractors believe that prolonging breastfeeding for several years can result in the child developing emotional or psycho-sexual problems, though there is no research that supports this theory.

In developing nations within Africa and elsewhere, it is sometimes common for more than one woman to feed a child. This shared breastfeeding has been highlighted as a source of HIV infection amongst infants born HIV-negative [11].

See also: wet nurse

Breastfeeding method

There are many texts and videos available to new mothers to assist in the establishment of breastfeeding. The baby will usually indicate hunger by crying or moaning and fussing. When the baby's cheek is stroked, the baby will move his or her face towards the stroking and open his or her mouth, demonstrating the rooting instinct. Breastfeeding can make the mother thirsty and can last for up to an hour (usually in the early days, when both mother and baby are inexperienced) – it is therefore common for the mother to replace lost water by drinking during the process.

Feeding and positioning

It is essential for the infant to feed in the correct position and with an adequate latch.

While for some people the process of breastfeeding seems natural there is a level of skill required for successful feeding and a correct technique to use. Incorrect positioning is one of the main reasons for unsuccessful feeding and can easily cause pain in the nipple or breast. By stroking the baby's cheek with the nipple the baby will open its mouth and turn toward the nipple, which should then be pushed in so that the baby has a mouthful of nipple and areola; the nipple should be at the back of the baby's throat. Achievement of this position is referred to as latching on. Inverted or flat nipples can be massaged to give extra area for the baby to latch onto. Many women choose to wear a nursing bra to allow easier access to the breast than normal bras.

The baby may pull away from the nipple after a few minutes or after a much longer period of time. Sometimes the baby will re-latch on the same breast or mother may offer the other side.

The length of feeding is quite variable. Regardless of the duration, it is important for the breastfeeding woman to be comfortable.

  • Upright: The sitting position with the back straight
  • Mobile: The mother carries her nursling in a sling or other baby carrier while breastfeeding. Doing so permits the mother to incorporate breastfeeding into the varied work of daily life
  • Lying down: Good for night feeds or for those who have had a caesarean section
    • On her back: Mother is usually sitting slightly upright; particularly useful for tandem breastfeeding
    • On her side: The mother and baby lie on their sides
  • Hands and knees: The mother is on all fours with the baby underneath her (not usually recommended)

There are many positions and ways in which the feeding infant can be held. This depends upon the comfort of the mother and child and the feeding preference of the baby – some babies tend to prefer one breast to another. Most women breastfeed their child in the cradling position.

  • Cradling positions:
    • Cradle hold: The baby is held with its head in the woman's elbow horizontally across the abdomen, "tummy to tummy", with the woman in an upright and supported position [12]
    • Cross-cradle hold: As above but the baby is held with its head in the woman's hand
  • Football hold: The woman is upright and the baby is held securely under the mother's arm with the head cradled in her hands.This position is especially useful for feeding twins simultaneously [13]
  • Feeding up hill: The baby lies stomach to stomach with the mother who is lying on her back; this is helpful for babies finding it difficult to feed
  • Lying down:
    • On its side: The mother and baby lie on their sides
    • On its back: The baby is lying on its back (cushioned by something soft) with the mother on her hands and knees above the child (not usually recommended)

When tandem breastfeeding the mother is unable to move the baby from one breast to another and comfort can be more of an issue. This brings extra strain to the arms, especially as the babies grow, and many mothers of twins recommend the use of more supporting pillows. Favoured positions include:

  • Double cradle hold
  • Double clutch hold [14]
  • One clutched baby and one cradled baby
  • Lying down

Breast and nipple pain

Breastfeeding may hurt some women. Sometimes this is related to an incorrect technique, but it usually eases over time. Milk ducts can block up on occasion, leading to breast engorgement or mastitis, and should be addressed with massage and by encouraging the baby to suck from that side to keep it as empty as possible until the problem goes away. The presence of thrush in the nipples can also be painful. Limiting feeding time does not prevent soreness.

Cracked nipples can happen to anyone whose baby is not positioned correctly. The baby's rough tongue can also cause grazes and the suction can cause bruising if the mother and baby have not learned to latch and unlatch. To break the suction, mothers should wait for the baby to come off the breast, insert a finger just inside the baby's mouth, or press down gently on the breast. The use of nursing pads or tight bras can lead to breast and nipple pain, as can hair dryers, sun lamps, soap, alcohol, perfume, deodorant, hair spray, body powder and incorrect use of breast pumps. Bottles and nipple shields may change the way the baby sucks, as well.

Some mothers apply medical grade lanolin to sooth nipples; La Leche League International has endorsed Lansinoh, an ultra pure medical grade lanolin cream designed for breastfeeding mothers. Mothers can also express milk and rub it on the nipples.[15] After six weeks of breastfeeding, the process usually becomes easier, as both mother and baby learn the best technique. Mothers can also buy or rent breast pumps to extract the milk, if nipple pain becomes unbearable. It should be noted, however, that pumping breast milk can also be associated with nipple pain, and is best used only as a temporary solution while the most common culprit, a poor latch, is improved.

Nipple damage due to breastfeeding can increase the likelihood of a Candidiasis infection. If a baby develops symptoms of oral thrush, both the mother and the child must be treated at the same time.[16] Proper antifungal treatment will help neutralise the infection and aid in the nipple healing process.

Weaning

Weaning is the process of gradually introducing the infant to what will be its adult diet and withdrawing the supply of milk. The infant is considered to be fully weaned once it no longer receives any breast milk and begins to rely on solid foods for all its nutrition. Most mammals cease the production of the enzyme lactase at the end of weaning, becoming lactose intolerant. Many humans have a mutation that allows the production of lactase throughout life and can drink milk well beyond the age of weaning [17]. Typically, this milk comes from domesticated animals.

In the past bromocriptine was sometimes used to reduce the engorgement experienced by many women during weaning. However, it was discovered that when used for this purpose, this medication posed serious health risks to women, such as stroke, and the U.S. FDA withdrew this indication for the drug. [18]

History of breastfeeding

An early 20th century Korean woman wearing traditional breastfeeding clothing.
Two early 20th century Korean women feeding their babies while working.

In the early years of the human species, breastfeeding was as common as it was for other mammals feeding their young. There were no alternative foods for the infants, and the mother, along with other lactating females, would have no choice but to breastfeed the children. This process is still seen in many developing countries and is known as shared breastfeeding.

The Egyptian, Greek and Roman empires saw women only feeding their own children. However, breastfeeding began to be seen as something too common to be done by royalty, and wet nurses were employed to breastfeed the children of the royal families. This was extended over the ages, particularly in western Europe, and saw women of noble birth (or who married into nobility) making use of wet nurses.

According to some Brahminical literature, breastfeeding in 2nd century India was commonly practised but not until the fifth day, allowing the colostrum to be discarded and the true breast milk to flow.

Developing alternatives

Alternatives first became popular in the late 15th century with many parents substituting cow or goat's milk for their own breast milk. This was particularly necessary for those families working the land whereby time could not easily be taken out to regularly breastfeed the child. Such trends soon faded when the problems associated with these milks started to show, and by the mid to late 16th century breastfeeding once again became the preferred feeding method for most families.citation needed] The Italian Hieronymus Mercurialis wrote in 1583 that women generally finished breastfeeding an infant exclusively after the third month and entirely after around 13 months.

The feeding of flour or cereal mixed with broth or water, became the next alternative in the 19th century but once again quickly faded. Around this time there became an obvious disparity in the feeding habits of those living in rural areas and those in urban areas. Most likely due to the availability of alternative foods, babies in urban areas were breastfed for a much shorter length of time, supplementing the feeds earlier than those in rural areas.

Though first developed by Henri Nestlé in the 1860s, infant formula received a huge boost during the post World War II "Baby Boom". The aggressive marketing campaigns when business and births decreased saw Nestlé and other such companies focus on non-industrialised countries, while government strategies in industrialised countries attempted to highlight the benefits of breastfeeding.

Breastfeeding in Japan

Traditionally, Japanese babies were born at home and breastfed with the help of breast massage. Weaning was often late, with breastfeeding in rare cases continuing until early adolescence. After World War II Western medicine was taken to Japan and the women began giving birth in hospitals, where the baby was usually taken to the nursery and fed formula. In 1974 a new breastfeeding promotion by the government helped to boost the awareness of its benefits and the uptake has sharply increased. Japan became the first developed country to have a Baby-friendly hospital (and as of 2006 has another 24 such facilities). citation needed]

Breastfeeding in Canada

A 1994 Canadian government health survey found that 73% of Canadian mothers initiated breastfeeding, up from 38% in 1963. It has been speculated that the gap between breastfeeding generations in Canada contributes to lack of success of those who do attempt it: new parents cannot look to older family members for help with breastfeeding since they are also ignorant on the topic. [19] Western Canadians are more likely to breastfeed; just 53% of Atlantic province mothers breastfeed, compared to 87% in British Columbia. More than 90% of women surveyed said they breastfeed because it provides more benefits for the baby than does formula. Of women who did not breastfeed, 40% said formula feeding was easier (the most prevalent answer). Women who were older, more educated, had higher income, and were married were the most likely to breastfeed. Immigrant women were also more likely to breastfeed. About 40% of mothers who breastfeed do so for less than three months. Women were most likely to discontinue breastfeeding if they perceived themselves to have insufficient milk. However, among women who breastfed for more than three months, returning to work or a previous decision to stop at that time were the top reasons.

A 2003 La Leche League International study found that 72% of Canadian mothers initiate breastfeeding and that 31% continue to do so past four to five months. [20]

A 1996 article in the Canadian Journal of Public Health found that, in Vancouver, 82.9% of mothers initiated breastfeeding, but that this differed by Caucasian (91.6%) and non-Caucasian (56.8%) women. [21] The article reported that just 18.2% of mothers breastfeed at nine months, and that breastfeeding practices were significantly associated with the mothers' marital status, education and family income.

Typically, if a baby is born in a hospital in Canada, the mother will be given a bottle filled with formula "just in case" she has any problems breastfeeding. However, faced with unfamiliar emotions just after giving birth, with hormones suddenly dropping, and with no help from hospital staff, breastfeeding frustration is not uncommon, and the bottle becomes a source of welcome relief rather than a last resort.

Breastfeeding in Cuba

Since 1940, Cuba's constitution has contained a provision officially recognising and supporting breastfeeding. Article 68 of the 1975 constitution reads, in part: During the six weeks immediately preceding childbirth and the six weeks following, a woman shall enjoy obligatory vacation from work on pay at the same rate, retaining her employment and all the rights pertaining to such employment and to her labour contract. During the nursing period, two extraordinary daily rest periods of a half hour each shall be allowed her to feed her child.

Publicity, promotion and law

Actress Lucy Lawless in a promotional poster for World Breastfeeding Week.

In response to public pressure, the health departments of various governments have recognised the importance of encouraging women to breastfeed. The required provision of baby changing facilities was a large step towards making places more accessible for parents and in many countries there are now laws in place to protect the rights of a breastfeeding mother when feeding her child in public.

The World Health Organization (WHO), along with grassroots non-governmental organisations like the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) have played a large role in encouraging these governmental departments to promote breastfeeding. Under this advice they have developed national breastfeeding strategies, including the promotion of its benefits and attempts to encourage mothers, particularly those under the age of 25, to choose to feed their child with breast milk.

Government campaigns and strategies around the world include:

  • National Breastfeeding Week in the UK
  • The Department of Health and Ageing Breastfeeding Strategy in Australia
  • The National Women's Health Information Center in the U.S.
  • La Leche League International, a volunteer mother-to-mother international group
  • World Breastfeeding Week

However, there has been a long, ongoing struggle between corporations promoting artificial substitutes and grassroots organisations and WHO promoting breastfeeding. The International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes was developed in 1981 by WHO, but violations have been reported by organisations, including those networked in IBFAN. In particular, Nestlé took three years before it initially implemented the code, and in the late 1990s and early 2000s was again found in violation. Nestlé had previously faced a boycott, beginning in the U.S. but soon spreading through the rest of the world, for marketing practices in the third world (see Nestlé boycott).

Developing nations

In many countries, particularly those with a generally poor level of health, malnutrition is the majority cause of death in children under 5, with 60% of all those cases being within the first year of life [22]. International organisations such as Plan International and La Leche League have helped to promote breastfeeding around the world, educating new mothers and helping the governments to develop strategies to increase the number of women exclusively breastfeeding.

Traditional beliefs in many developing countries give different advice to women raising their newborn child. In Ghana babies are still frequently fed with tea alongside breastfeeding [23]. This reduces the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding and the drink can inhibit the absorption of iron, important in the prevention of anaemia.

Breastfeeding in public

When in public with a breastfed baby it is often difficult to avoid the need to feed the infant. Therefore legal and social rules regarding indecent exposure and dress code, as well as inhibitions of the woman, tend to be relaxed for this situation. There are numerous laws around the world that have made public breastfeeding legal and disallow companies from prohibiting it in the workplace. Yet, the public reaction at the sight of breastfeeding can make the situation uncomfortable for those involved.

USA

In the U.S. an appropriations bill (H.R.2490) with a breastfeeding amendment (H.AMDT.295 to H.R.2490) was signed into law on September 29, 1999 affirming the right of a woman to breastfeed her child anywhere on federal property. However, not all state laws have affirmed the same right in their respective public places. Recent attempts to codify a child's right to nurse found success in Ohio, but failed in West Virginia and some other states. By June 2005, 35 states had enacted legislation to protect breastfeeding mothers and their children. Laws protecting the right to nurse aim to change attitudes and promote increased incidence and duration of breastfeeding. Nowhere is breastfeeding in public illegal.

UK

A survey reported by the UK Department of Health stated that most people (84%) find breastfeeding in public acceptable as long as it is done discreetly [24]. Contrastingly, 67% of mothers are worried about general opinion being against public breastfeeding. To combat these fears in Scotland, a bill [25] (pdf) safeguarding the freedom of women to breastfeed in public has been passed [26] in the Scottish Parliament [27]. The legislation sets up a fine of up to £2500 for preventing breastfeeding in legally permitted places.

Canada

In Canada, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms affords some protection under sex equality. Although Canadian human rights protection does not explicitly include breastfeeding, a 1989 Supreme Court of Canada decision (Brooks v. Canadian Safeway Ltd.) set the precedent for pregnancy as a condition unique to women and that thus discrimination on the basis of pregnancy is a form of sex discrimination. Canadian legal precedent also allows women the right to bare their breasts, just as men may. In British Columbia, the British Columbia Human Rights Commission Policy and Procedures Manual protects the rights of female workers who wish to breastfeed.

Cultural conflicts

When a Peruvian immigrant in the USA exposed her breast to feed her baby, and a photo was taken of the act, American police forces briefly considered it to be sexual abuse and production of child pornography, resulting in the mother's arrest and the seizure of her children:

Victor Jaeger...says he was prepared to testify on the couple's behalf and explain what appears to him to have been a cultural misunderstanding. Jaeger, who grew up in Peru, says breast-feeding is culturally important in his native country and considered acceptable to do in public, particularly in the country's jungle regions. "My cousin sent me a picture of her newborn, and it was of the baby being breast-fed," he says. "As someone who has lived here for 20 years, I asked myself, 'Why did she send me that picture?' To her, it was nothing."
1-Hour Arrest, Thomas Korosec, Dallas Observer, Apr 17, 2003

Recent global uptake

The following table shows the uptake of exclusive breastfeeding. Sources: WHO Global Data Bank on Breastfeeding and UNICEF Global Database Breastfeeding Indicators

Country Percentage Year Type of feeding
Armenia 0.7% 1993 Exclusive
20.8% 1997 Exclusive
Benin 13% 1996 Exclusive
16% 1997 Exclusive
Bolivia 59% 1989 Exclusive
53% 1994 Exclusive
Central African Republic 4% 1995 Exclusive
Chile 97% 1993 Predominant
Colombia 19% 1993 Exclusive
95% (16%) 1995 Predominant (exclusive)
Dominican Republic 14% 1986 Exclusive
10% 1991 Exclusive
Ecuador 96% 1994 Predominant
Egypt 68% 1995 Exclusive
Ethiopia 78% 2000 Exclusive
Mali 8% 1987 Exclusive
12% 1996 Exclusive
Mexico 37.5% 1987 Exclusive
Niger 4% 1992 Exclusive
Nigeria 2% 1992 Exclusive
Pakistan 12% 1988 Exclusive
25% 1992 Exclusive
Poland 1.5% 1988 Exclusive
17% 1995 Exclusive
Saudi Arabia 55% 1991 Exclusive
Senegal 7% 1993 Exclusive
South Africa 10.4% 1998 Exclusive
Sweden 55% 1992 Exclusive
98% 1990 Predominant
61% 1993 Exclusive
Thailand 90% 1987 Predominant
99% (0.2%) 1993 Predominant (exclusive)
4% 1996 Exclusive
United Kingdom [28] 62% 1990
66% 1995
Zambia 13% 1992 Exclusive
23% 1996 Exclusive
Zimbabwe 12% 1988 Exclusive
17% 1994 Exclusive
38.9% 1999 Exclusive

Lactation without pregnancy

Although it is not widely known in developed countries, women who have never been pregnant are sometimes able to stimulate lactation sufficient to breastfeed. This is called "induced lactation", while a woman who has lactated before and re-starts is said to "relactate". If the nipples are stimulated as in breastfeeding for a while (such as by a breast pump or actual suckling), eventually the breasts will begin to produce milk which can be used to feed a baby. Once established, lactation adjusts to demand. For this reason, adoptive mothers, usually initially in conjunction with some form of supplementation, such as a supplemental nursing system, are able to breastfeed their infants and young children [29]. There is thought to be little or no difference in milk composition whether lactation is induced or a result of pregnancy. Rare accounts of male lactation (as distinct from galactorrhea) exist in the medical literature.

Some couples may choose to induce lactation as a sexual practice.

Additionally, some drugs, primarily atypical antipsychotics such as Risperdal, may cause lactation in both women and men.

See also

  • Attachment parenting
  • Baby-friendly hospital
  • Continuum concept
  • Lactation
  • List of child related articles
  • Erotic lactation
  • Parenting
  • Roman Charity
  • Topfree equality
  • Breast milk
  • Breast pump
  • Baby-led weaning

References

Numbered references

  1. ^ a b Exclusive Breastfeeding. WHO: Child and Adolescent Health and Development. Retrieved on 2006-05-03.
  2. ^ Gartner LM, Morton J, Lawrence RA, Naylor AJ, O'Hare D, Schanler RJ, Eidelman AI (2005). "Breastfeeding and the use of human milk". Pediatrics 115 (2): 496-506. PubMed fulltext.
  3. ^ a b c Nancy Mohrbacher, Julie Stock, LA Leche League International (2003). The Breastfeeding Answer Book, 3rd ed. (revised), La Leche League International. ISBN 0-912500-92-1.
  4. ^ a b c Rilemma 1994
  5. ^ Cregan 2002
  6. ^ Sears, MD, William; Sears, RN, Martha: The Breastfeeding Book, Little, Brown, 2002. ISBN 0-316-77924-5
  7. ^ Hopkinson 1988
  8. ^ deCarvalho 1985
  9. ^ Daly 1993
  10. ^ AAP, 1997
  11. ^ a b c Fray, K: "Oh Baby...Birth, Babies & Motherhood Uncensored, pages 173-184, Random House NZ, 2005. ISBN 1-86941-713-5
  12. ^ World Health Organization, "Global strategy for infant and young child feeding," section titled "EXERCISING OTHER FEEDING OPTIONS" 24 November 2001
  13. ^ Unicef on breastfeeding and HIV; acquired 2006-08-19
  14. ^ The WHO on breastfeeding with Tuberculosis; acquired 2006-08-19
  15. ^ La Leche League International on losing weight during breastfeeding; acquired 2006-08-19
  16. ^ La Leche League International Nutritional balance section; acquired 2006-08-19
  17. ^ American SIDS Institute Reducing the risk of SIDS; acquired 2006-08-19
  18. ^ American Association of Pediatrics on cannabis (see table 2); acquired 2006-08-19
  19. ^ Handout #4. Is My Baby Getting Enough Milk? Revised January 2005, Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005

Unnumbered references

  • Breastfeeding, Biocultural Perspectives; Editors Patricia Stuart-Macadam & Katherine A. Dettwyler.
  • Hausman, Bernice (2003). Mother's Milk: Breastfeeding Controversies in American Culture. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-96656-6
  • Huggins, Kathleen (1999). The Nursing Mother's Companion. Harvard Common Press; 4th edition. ISBN 1-55832-152-7
  • Lothrop, H. (1998). Breastfeeding Naturally, Fisher Books, USA. ISBN 1-55561-131-1
  • Mercurialis, H. (1583). De Morbis Puerorum.
  • Minchin, M. (1985). Breastfeeding matters, Almo Press Publications, Australia. ISBN 0-86861-810-1
  • Moody, J., Britten, J. and Hogg, K. (1996). Breastfeeding your baby, National Childbirth Trust, UK. ISBN 0-7225-3635-6
  • Pryor, Gail. (1996). Nursing Mother, Working Mother: The Essential Guide for Breastfeeding and Staying Close to Your Baby After You Return to Work. Harvard Common Press ISBN 1-55832-117-9.
  • Royal College of Midwives (1991). Successful Breastfeeding: A Practical Guide for Midwives, Royal College of Midwives, London.
  • Stuart-Macadam, P. and Dettwyler, K. (1995). Breastfeeding: Biocultural Perspectives (Foundations of Human Behavior), Aldine de Gruyter. ISBN 0-202-01192-5
  • Perez-Reyes M, Wall ME Presence of delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol in human milk. N Engl J Med 1982; 307:819-820 PMID 6287261
  • Astley SJ, Little RE., Maternal marijuana use during lactation and infant development at one year. Neurotoxicol Teratol. 1990 Mar-Apr;12(2):161-8. PMID 2333069
  • Leeson CPM, Kattenhorn M, Deanfield JE, Lucas A Duration of breast feeding and arterial distensibility in early adult life: population based study BMJ, Mar 2001; 322: 643 - 647.

Other well-known authors on breastfeeding

  • Arlene Eisenberg
  • Hale Thomas (Medications in Mothers Milk)
  • Sheila Kitzinger
  • La Leche League International
  • Ruth A. Lawrence, M.D.
  • Francesca Naish & Janette Roberts
  • Miriam Stoppard
  • Kathy Dettwyler

Website references

  • American Academy of Pediatrics Policy Statement on Breastfeeding
  • 4woman.gov – US Department of Health & Human Services Breastfeeding resource page
  • Breastfeeding NHS – UK NHS Breastfeeding strategy
  • Royal Australasian College of Physicians Paediatric Policy: Brreastfeeding
  • ADC Online journals
  • American Family Physician Initial Management of Breastfeeding by Keith Sinusas and Amy Galgliardi
  • Linkages Project Benefits of Breastfeeding USAID Program
  • Benefits of breastfeeding United States Breastfeeding Committee
  • Breastfeeding is Priceless No Substitute for Human Milk Coalition for Improving Maternity Services
  • Breastfeed-essentials.com
  • Plan International
  • La Leche League International – An international organisation whose mission is to help mothers worldwide to breastfeed through mother-to-mother support, encouragement, information, and education and to promote a better understanding of breastfeeding as an important element in the healthy development of the baby and mother
  • WhyQuit.com – Anti-smoking site with numerous links in the "Known Breastfeeding Risk Factors" section
  • Mama's Baby: Happy, Healthy and Breastfed Black Women's health Imperative
  • The Adoptive Breastfeeding Resource Website
  • Weaning Diary

Infant pain and breastfeeding

  • American Academy of Pediatrics. Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health; Task Force on Pain in Infants, Children, and Adolescents. The assessment and management of acute pain in infants, children, and adolescents. Pediatrics. 2001 Sep;108(3):793-7.
  • Howard CR, Howard FM, Weitzman ML. Acetaminophen analgesia in neonatal circumcision: the effect on pain. Pediatrics. 1994;93(4):641-6.
  • The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding, Third Edition, July 1981. Pages 92-93 Elective Surgery for you or baby
  • See also the section on circumcision and breastfeeding in Medical analysis of circumcision

Health risks of formula feeding

  • Health risks of not breastfeeding US Department of Health & Human Services
  • The Risks of Infant Formula Feeding breastfeeding task force of greater Los Angeles
  • Breastfeeding and the Risk of Postneonatal Death in the United States Pediatrics, Vol. 113 No. 5 May 2004 & resulting correspondence
  • Supplementation of the Breastfed Baby "Just One Bottle Won't Hurt" ...or Will It? by Marsha Walker RN IBCLC (National Alliance for Breastfeeding Advocacy)
  • Salon.com Formula for disaster by Katie Allison Granju
  • What should I know about infant formula? Kellymom.com (contains links to other websites)
  • National Alliance for Breastfeeding Advocacy contains links to other articles including:
  • Contaminents in Infant Formula
  • Recalls of Infant Feeding Products
  • Antidepressants, Antipsychotics, Benzodiazepines, and the Breastfeeding Dyad Perspectives in Psychiatric Care, Apr-Jun 2004, by Kirsten J. Malone This article discusses the risks to both mother and child of formula feeding and attempts to weigh them against the risk to infants of absorbing psychotropic druge through breastmilk.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Breastfeeding
  • The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine - a worldwide organization of physicians dedicated to the promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding and human lactation
  • Breastfeeding: A Guide for the Medical Profession by Ruth A. Lawrence and Robert Lawrence - The most up-to-date (6th edition, 2005) , authoritative, evidence-based reference book on breastfeeding
  • Australian Breastfeeding Association — Informative website and forum
  • Baby Milk Action — Supports mothers' rights to breastfeed
  • Breastfeeding information & resources from Seattle Children's Hospital
  • Breastfeeding Medicine - As the Official Journal of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine, this new peer-reviewed journal provides a scientific forum on breastfeeding and human lactation
  • Canadian Breastfeeding Rights — from Canadian Infant Feeding Action Coalition
  • Comparison of Human Milk and Formula
  • Human Milk Secretion: An Overview
  • Kellymom.com — Providing evidence based breastfeeding information
  • Read Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Breastfeeding and U.S. law
  • U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) "Breast-Feeding Best Bet for Babies"
  • WHO — Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices
  • Collection and storage of breast milk

Videos

  • Instructional videos (with Norwegian comments, but written explanations in English)
Search Term: "Breastfeeding"
breast feeding news and breast feeding articles

Here's our top rated breast feeding links for the day:

Breast-feeding mom files complaint against airlines 

USA Today - Nov 17 2:07 AM
A New Mexico woman breast-feeding her child was booted off her Oct. 13 Vermont-to-New York City flight after she refused to comply with a flight attendant's order to cover up. That has led to a clash that's sparked a discrimination...
Save

Breast-Feeding Mom Booted From Flight 
WGAL 8 Susquehanna Valley - Nov 17 6:42 AM
A Santa Fe, N.M., woman said she was kicked off an airplane for breast-feeding her child.
Save

Breast-Feeding Mother Kicked Off Plane In Vermont 
CBS 4 Boston - Nov 17 3:20 AM
A woman who claims she was kicked off a plane in Burlington, Vermont because she was breast-feeding has filed a complaint against Delta and Freedom Airlines. The woman has the support of more than two dozens parents and children who held a "nurse-in" at the airport. More Water Cooler News More Local News
Save

Breast-feeding mothers stage nurse-in 
MSNBC - Nov 16 8:56 PM
About 30 parents and their children sat in front of an airline counter Wednesday to protest the treatment of a passenger who said she was kicked off a plane for breast-feeding her child.
Save

Breast-Feeding Mom Booted From Flight 
Fox 12 Oregon - Nov 16 5:53 AM
SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. -- A Santa Fe, N.M., woman said she was kicked off an airplane for breast-feeding her child. The alleged incident has drawn support from about 30 parents and their children.
Save

Thank you for viewing the breast feeding page breast feeding. 

breastfeeding
brest feeding
breast feading
breat feeding
breast feedin
brast feeding
beast feeding
breast fedding
breast feeeding
breast feedimg
breast feedig
breas feeding

 

Ever wondered what others are searching for in relation to breast feeding? Now you can see.  Below is a listing of  what everyone else is searching for in regard to breast feeding.

1. breast feeding
2. breast feeding problems
3. breast feeding video
4. breast feeding pictures
5. zoloft and breast feeding
6. zoloft breast feeding
7. surgery birth control and breast feeding
8. surgery breast feeding a baby
9. surgery pictures of breast feeding
10. women breast feeding
11. breast feeding in public
12. public breast feeding
13. surgery benefits of breast feeding
14. woman breast feeding
15. surgery disadvantages of breast feeding
16. surgery foods to avoid while breast feeding
17. surgery problems with breast feeding
18. surgery breast feeding after reduction
19. surgery breast feeding how to
20. breast feeding videos
21. surgery advantages of breast feeding
22. surgery breast feeding birth control
23. surgery breast feeding in public
24. surgery foods to avoid when breast feeding
25. surgery medicine and breast feeding
26. surgery weaning from breast feeding
27. breast feeding articles in the lancet medical journal
28. breast feeding baby
29. breast feeding bra
30. effexor and breast feeding
31. surgery advantages and disadvantages of breast feeding
32. surgery breast feeding and drinking
33. surgery breast feeding and flu
34. surgery importance of breast feeding
35. surgery negatives of breast feeding
36. surgery zoloft and breast feeding
37. advantages of breast feeding
38. benefits of breast feeding
39. breast feeding and cancer
40. man breast feeding
41. women breast feeding men
42. breast augmentation feeding periareolar incision
43. breast feeding in public places
44. video of women breast feeding cat
45. wine and breast feeding
46. extended breast feeding
47. masters augmentation and breast feeding
48. breast feeding mums
49. breast feeding a baby
50. breast feeding day expressing time
51. how to stop breast feeding
52. breast feeding men
53. breast feeding weaning
54. male breast feeding
55. breast feeding and brain development
56. breast feeding and weight loss
57. breast feeding cat
58. breast feeding reactions
59. breast feeding twins
60. mother breast feeding
61. baby breast feeding
62. breast feeding bibs
63. breast feeding center
64. breast feeding mothers
65. breast feeding support
66. breast feeding vs bottle feeding
67. celexa breast feeding
68. breast feeding laws
69. breast feeding statistics
70. breast feeding women
71. pictures of breast feeding
72. pictures of mothers breast feeding
73. weaning from breast feeding
74. weight loss and breast feeding
75. breast cat feeding woman
76. breast feeding and birth control
77. breast feeding and medication
78. breast feeding center of columbia
79. breast feeding info
80. breast feeding mother
81. breast feeding simulation
82. progesterone levels while breast feeding
83. prozac breast feeding
84. weaning breast feeding
85. weight loss while breast feeding
86. adoptive breast feeding
87. baby breast feeding benefits
88. breast feeding of very low birth weight infants
89. foods to avoid while breast feeding
90. women breast feeding in public pics
91. birth control pills breast feeding
92. breast feeding a man
93. breast feeding baby mums offended make 4rm
94. breast feeding dvd
95. breast feeding milk storage online
96. breast feeding milk storage system
97. breast feeding milk storage system online
98. breast feeding question
99. calories and burned and breast and feeding
100. elizabeth+ breast feeding
101. feeding breast
102. fenugreek breast feeding
103. free breast feeding video
104. heather breast feeding
105. mammography while breast feeding
106. men breast feeding
107. mother jailed for breast feeding son 7 years old
108. online breast feeding dvd
109. online breast feeding video
110. people against breast feeding in public
111. woman breast feeding a cat
112. advantages & disadvantages of breast feeding
113. advantages of breast feeding for premature infants
114. amy breast feeding
115. birth control and breast feeding
116. breast feeding groups.msn.com site
117. breast feeding lacth on
118. breast feeding pig
119. breast feeding your man
120. hypercholesterolemia breast feeding
121. iron deficiency and breast feeding
122. bottle feeding and breast feeding
123. breast feeding advantages
124. breast feeding baby posted mums
125. breast feeding birth control
126. breast feeding picture
127. breast feeding toddler
128. brewers yeast and breast feeding
129. lorazapam breast feeding
130. medications and breast feeding ceftriaxone
131. prozac and breast feeding
132. recommendations for breast feeding babies
133. retin a and breast feeding
134. vegan breast feeding and gas
135. what to eat while breast feeding
136. adopted baby breast feeding
137. adopted baby breast feeding pictures
138. bankruptcy foods to avoid while breast feeding
139. best bottle for breast feeding
140. bike breast feeding after reduction
141. breakfast breast feeding to bottle feeding
142. breast feeding a 8-year-old + video
143. breast feeding an adopted baby
144. breast feeding and atkins diet
145. breast feeding and bottle feeding
146. breast feeding and bottle feeding at the same time
147. breast feeding and drinking
148. breast feeding and lactobacillus
149. breast feeding and pacifiers
150. breast feeding calorie loss
151. breast feeding diets
152. breast feeding difficulties
153. breast feeding engorgement
154. breast feeding food
155. breast feeding group
156. breast feeding medications ceftriaxone
157. breast feeding public
158. breast feeding reglin
159. breast feeding to bottle feeding
160. breast feeding versus bottle feeding
161. broker birth control and breast feeding
162. cars against breast feeding
163. checkers breast feeding weight loss
164. colombia woman breast feeding
165. computer drugs and breast feeding
166. computers after breast feeding
167. computers breast feeding flu
168. coupons thrush breast feeding
169. credit how to stop breast feeding
170. crm importance of breast feeding
171. dating breast feeding and drinking
172. dehydration and breast feeding
173. depression breast feeding how to
174. diner medicine and breast feeding
175. dinner diet for breast feeding
176. disadvantages of breast feeding
177. disease breast to bottle feeding
178. drying out after breast feeding
179. email breast feeding in public
180. flatulence breast feeding and pumping
181. flu breast feeding versus bottle feeding
182. food breast feeding a baby
183. glasses get pregnant while breast feeding
184. glaucoma not breast feeding
185. hotel breast feeding bra
186. house breast feeding baby
187. infant breast feeding
188. is breast feeding good for your baby
189. jazz breast feeding mothers
190. jeep breast feeding support
191. jokes about breast feeding babies
192. lamisil and breast feeding
193. laptop breast feeding and flu
194. laptop weaning from breast feeding
195. lawyers disadvantages of breast feeding
196. lcd mother breast feeding
197. lend breast feeding com
198. medication breast feeding
199. mortgage foods to avoid when breast feeding
200. neonatal breast feeding
201. network zoloft breast feeding
202. not breast feeding
203. not drink cow's milk breast feeding
204. novel breast feeding and weight
205. novel pregnant while breast feeding
206. obesity breast feeding world
207. percentage breast feeding
208. photographs zoloft and breast feeding
209. physics breast feeding birth control
210. plasma breast feeding jaundice
211. polarized breast feeding
212. pools breast feeding and bottle feeding
213. print breast feeding witch
214. programming advantages of breast feeding
215. recorder for breast feeding
216. recovery breast feeding versus formula
217. rhinoplasty advantages and disadvantages of breast feeding
218. ring breast feeding and weight loss
219. satellite breast feeding law
220. save breast feeding infants
221. services breast feeding video
222. stereos post breast feeding
223. stores breast feeding vs bottle
224. sunglasses breast feeding food
225. television flu shot breast feeding
226. tones breast feeding statistics
227. trucks breast feeding benefits
228. tubs breast feeding versus
229. uninsured effects of breast feeding
230. videos of women breast feeding
231. warts benefits of breast feeding
232. what not to eat when breast feeding
233. will negatives of breast feeding
234. win pictures of breast feeding
235. windows breast feeding medications
236. woman breast feeding cat
237. 24 hour breast feeding support
238. after breast feeding
239. alcohal and breast feeding
240. antibiotics safe during breast feeding
241. antidepressant breast feeding
242. breast feeding african-american
243. breast feeding and bleeding
244. breast feeding and cold medicine
245. breast feeding and hair dye
246. breast feeding and medications
247. breast feeding anesthesia
248. breast feeding babies
249. breast feeding benefits
250. breast feeding bras
251. breast feeding conceptual
252. breast feeding death
253. breast feeding infants
254. breast feeding mothers and depression
255. breast feeding questions
256. breast feeding reduced cancer risk
257. breast feeding versus
258. breast feeding vs. bottle feeding
259. breast feeding world
260. coumadin and breast feeding
261. diflucan and breast feeding
262. drinking during breast feeding
263. enbrel and breast feeding
264. flu shot and breast feeding
265. foods to avoid when breast feeding
266. funky breast feeding bras
267. green tea supplements and breast feeding
268. hair loss + breast feeding
269. lilani + breast feeding
270. love breast feeding
271. lucy lawess breast feeding
272. medications and pregnancy and breast feeding
273. non breast feeding
274. osteporosis and breast feeding
275. pepto bismol while breast feeding
276. persuasive speech on breast feeding
277. post breast feeding
278. preeclampsia + breast feeding
279. premie baby breast feeding
280. purifiers breast feeding with implants
281. real pictures of breast feeding
282. recepies breast feeding no gas
283. reglan breast feeding
284. sister breast feeding her brother
285. smoking and babies and breast feeding
286. third world countries breast feeding
287. what is a good vegetarian recipe for a breast feeding mother
288. abiliphy and breast feeding
289. about breast feeding
290. advantages and disadvantages of breast feeding
291. against breast feeding
292. beta hydroxy and breast feeding
293. bleeding, cramping and breast feeding
294. breast effexor feeding
295. breast feeding + contraception in thirld world countries
296. breast feeding + failure
297. breast feeding adopted baby
298. breast feeding after reduction
299. breast feeding and alcohal
300. breast feeding and baby weight
301. breast feeding and benefits
302. breast feeding and flu
303. breast feeding and jack
304. breast feeding and latching
305. breast feeding and menstral cycle
306. breast feeding and no periods
307. breast feeding andtaking motrin
308. breast feeding awareness in the united states
309. breast feeding baby pictures
310. breast feeding benifits
311. breast feeding class
312. breast feeding classes
313. breast feeding cold
314. breast feeding com
315. breast feeding contraindications
316. breast feeding fequency
317. breast feeding flu
318. breast feeding foods
319. breast feeding foods to avoid
320. breast feeding for the first time
321. breast feeding garment for men
322. breast feeding gas
323. breast feeding how
324. breast feeding how to
325. breast feeding importance
326. breast feeding in canada
327. breast feeding india
328. breast feeding jaundice
329. breast feeding law
330. breast feeding machines for women
331. breast feeding medications
332. breast feeding motrin
333. breast feeding retin
334. breast feeding state laws
335. breast feeding statistics in united states
336. breast feeding stories
337. breast feeding supplies in washington dc
338. breast feeding the healthy infant
339. breast feeding turns me on
340. breast feeding versus formula feeding
341. breast feeding while taking toprol xl
342. breast feeding white pimple
343. breast feeding witch
344. breast feeding woman
345. britney spears breast feeding
346. brooke shields breast feeding
347. can breast feeding prevent implantation pregancy
348. can i get pregnant while breast feeding
349. chromium and green tea while breast feeding
350. cold medication to take while breast feeding
351. courtney love breast feeding
352. effects of breast feeding on mother
353. effects of nail polish fumes breast feeding
354. exercising when breast feeding
355. extended breast feeding video
356. families and breast feeding
357. fast safe weight loss while breast feeding
358. fasting breast feeding
359. food to avoid while breast feeding
360. for breast feeding
361. free breast feeding videos
362. get pregnant while breast feeding
363. great new beginnings breast feeding
364. hair perming during breast feeding
365. how long after breast feeding until you start to menstrate
366. human breast feeding
367. ibuprofen breast feeding
368. importance of breast feeding
369. infant bottle for breast feeding
370. jealousy breast feeding
371. joanelizabeth+ breast feeding
372. legalizing breast feeding in public
373. lexapril breast feeding
374. liani + breast feeding
375. lucy lawless breast feeding
376. lycium barbarum & breast feeding
377. madonna breast feeding
378. maxalon breast feeding
379. medela breast feeding
380. medicine and breast feeding
381. medicine breast feeding
382. metaclopromide, breast feeding
383. microsoft women breast feeding
384. mothers breast feeding
385. negatives of breast feeding
386. pepto bismuth and breast feeding
387. phenylephrine and breast feeding
388. prematurity and breast feeding
389. problems with breast feeding
390. progesterone breast feeding
391. skin to skin contact breast feeding
392. society of nuclear medicine pamphlet for breast feeding
393. southinda breast feeding
394. tandem breast feeding
395. thrush and breast feeding
396. thrush breast feeding
397. twins breast feeding pillow with back support
398. using meth while breast feeding
399. weaning babies from breast feeding
400. what not to eat when breast feeding a baby
401. world health organization and breast feeding
402. zicam safe for breast feeding
403. 10 tips for successful breast feeding
404. advantages of breast feeding compared to bottle feeding
405. affects of smoking and breast feeding
406. alcahol and breast feeding
407. american pediatric association, breast feeding
408. amoicillian breast feeding
409. andes women breast feeding lambs
410. anti-depressents and breast feeding
411. antihypertensives and breast feeding
412. azulfadine and breast feeding
413. babies 9 days old breast feeding often
414. baby breast feeding pictures
415. baby not latching on during breast feeding
416. baby talk breast feeding cover
417. beer and breast feeding
418. benadryl and breast feeding
419. benedryl and breast feeding
420. birth control pills and breast feeding
421. birthing and breast feeding mpegs
422. birthing and breast feeding videos
423. bleb and breast feeding
424. bottle feeding after breast feeding
425. bottle feeding versus breast feeding
426. bottle feeding vs. breast feeding infants
427. breast baby nurse feeding
428. breast feeding + colace
429. breast feeding + toddler
430. breast feeding adultbabys
431. breast feeding and acid reflux in infants
432. breast feeding and alcahol
433. breast feeding and constupation
434. breast feeding and guided imagery
435. breast feeding and insect bites
436. breast feeding and jaundice
437. breast feeding and letdown
438. breast feeding and menstruating
439. breast feeding and pepto bismol
440. breast feeding and weightloss
441. breast feeding anecdotes
442. breast feeding australia
443. breast feeding babies taking vitamin d
444. breast feeding baby worked hve time make
445. breast feeding blinkies
446. breast feeding braclet
447. breast feeding ceftriaxone
448. breast feeding clinics, coquitlam, new westminster
449. breast feeding clip
450. breast feeding company message rumina
451. breast feeding cream
452. breast feeding dangers
453. breast feeding diet control reflux
454. breast feeding drinking
455. breast feeding equipment reviews
456. breast feeding excites
457. breast feeding fondle
458. breast feeding for 7 years
459. breast feeding for toddlers constipation
460. breast feeding foremilk and hindmilk
461. breast feeding freebies
462. breast feeding garlic
463. breast feeding garment for anyone
464. breast feeding grazer
465. breast feeding how often
466. breast feeding how to get baby to latch on
467. breast feeding in hispanic women
468. breast feeding in public photo
469. breast feeding in the united kingdom
470. breast feeding infant
471. breast feeding latch on
472. breast feeding laws in minnesota
473. breast feeding medications and
474. breast feeding monologues
475. breast feeding network
476. breast feeding night gown
477. breast feeding objection
478. breast feeding online video
479. breast feeding options for mothers with ms
480. breast feeding outside of pregency
481. breast feeding padscotton
482. breast feeding past 6 months benefits
483. breast feeding pillow for twins
484. breast feeding problems expressing
485. breast feeding production and oatmeal
486. breast feeding prozac
487. breast feeding pup
488. breast feeding recommendations by theorist
489. breast feeding reminder feeding bracelet
490. breast feeding research
491. breast feeding soreness
492. breast feeding the new york times
493. breast feeding toddler video
494. breast feeding with a bottle
495. breast feeding yeast
496. breast feeding zyrtec
497. breast pumping after a missed feeding
498. breastpain and breast feeding
499. burp a baby when breast feeding
500. cabbage leaf breast feeding