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All health professionals say they are supportive of breastfeeding.
But many are supportive only when breastfeeding is going well,
and some, not even then. As soon as breastfeeding, or anything
in the life of the new mother is not perfect, too many advise
weaning or supplementation. The following is a partial list of
clues that help you judge whether the health professional is supportive
of breastfeeding, at least supportive enough so that if there
is trouble, s/he will make efforts to help you continue breastfeeding.
How to know a health professional is not supportive:
1. S/he gives you formula samples or formula
company literature when you are pregnant, or after you have
had the baby. These samples and literature are inducements to
use the product, and their distribution is called marketing.
There is no evidence that any particular formula is better or
worse than any other for the normal baby. The literature, CD’s
or videos accompanying samples are a means of subtly (and not
so subtly) undermining breastfeeding and glorifying formula.
If you do not believe this, ask yourself why the formula companies
are using cutthroat tactics to make sure that your doctor or
hospital gives out their literature and samples and not other
companies’? Should you not also wonder why the health
professional is not marketing breastfeeding?
2. S/he tells you that breastfeeding and bottle
feeding are essentially the same. Most bottle-fed babies grow
up healthy and secure and not all breastfed babies grow up healthy
and secure. But this does not mean that breastfeeding and bottle
feeding are essentially the same. Infant formula is a rough
copy of what we knew several years ago about breastmilk which
is in itself only a rough approximation of something we are
only beginning to get an inkling of and are constantly being
surprised by. For example, we have known for many years that
DHA and ARA were important to the baby’s brain development,
but it took years to get it into formulas. But it doesn’t
follow that the addition of these to formulas is doing what
they are supposed to, as their absorption from formula is different
from breastmilk. The many differences have important health
consequences. Many elements in breastmilk are not found in artificial
baby milk (formula) even though we have known of their importance
to the baby for several years—for example, antibodies
and cells for protection of the baby against infection, growth
factors that help the immune system, the brain and other organs
to mature. And breastfeeding is not the same as bottle feeding,
it is a whole different relationship. If you have been unable
to breastfeed, that is unfortunate (though most times the problems
could have been avoided), but to imply it is of no importance
is patronizing and just plain wrong. A baby does not have to
be breastfed to grow up happy, healthy and secure, but it does
help.
3. S/he tells you that formula x is best.
This usually means that s/he is listening too much to a particular
formula representative. It may mean that her/his children tolerated
this particular formula better than other formulas. It means
that s/he has unsubstantiated prejudices.
4. S/he tells you that it is not necessary
to feed the baby immediately after the birth since you are (will
be) tired and the baby is often not interested anyhow. It isn’t
necessary, but it is often very helpful (See handouts #1 Breastfeeding—Starting
Out Right and #1b The Importance of Skin to Skin Contact). Babies
can nurse while the mother is lying down or sleeping, though
most mothers do not want to sleep at a moment such as this.
Babies do not always show an interest in feeding immediately,
but this is not a reason to prevent them from having the opportunity.
Many babies latch on in the hour or two after delivery, and
this is the time that is most conducive to getting started well,
but they can’t do it if they are separated from their
mothers. If you are getting the impression that the baby’s
getting weighed, eye drops and vitamin K injection have priority
over establishing breastfeeding, you might wonder about someone’s
commitment to breastfeeding.
5. S/he tells you that there is no such thing
as nipple confusion and you should start giving bottles early
to your baby to make sure that the baby accepts a bottle nipple.
Why do you have to start giving bottles early if there is no
such thing as nipple confusion? Arguing that there is no evidence
for the existence of nipple confusion is putting the cart before
the horse. It is the artificial nipple, which no mammal until
man had ever used, and even man, not commonly before the end
of the nineteenth century, which needs to be shown to be harmless.
But the artificial nipple has not been proved harmless to breastfeeding.
The health professional who assumes the artificial nipple is
harmless is looking at the world as if bottle feeding, not breastfeeding,
were the normal physiologic method of infant feeding. By the
way, just because not all, or perhaps even not most, babies
who get artificial nipples have trouble with breastfeeding,
it does not follow that the early use of these things cannot
cause problems for some babies. It is often a combination of
factors, one of which could be the using of an artificial nipple,
which add up to trouble.
6. S/he tells you that you must stop breastfeeding
because you or your baby is sick, or because you will be taking
medicine or you will have a medical test done. There are occasional,
rare, situations when breastfeeding cannot continue, but often
health professionals only assume that the mother cannot continue
and very often they are wrong. The health professional who is
supportive of breastfeeding will make efforts to find out how
to avoid interruption of breastfeeding (the information in white
pages of the blue Compendium of Pharmaceutical Specialties and
the PDR are not a good references—every drug is contraindicated
according to them as the drug companies are more interested
in their liability than in the interests of mothers and babies).
When a mother must take medicine, the health professional will
try to use medication that does not require the mother to stop
breastfeeding. (In fact, very few medications require the mother
to stop breastfeeding). It is extremely uncommon for there to
be only one medication that can be used for a particular problem.
If the first choice of the health professional is a medication
that requires you to stop breastfeeding, you have a right to
be concerned that s/he has not really thought about the importance
of breastfeeding.
7. S/he is surprised to learn that your six
month old is still breastfeeding. Many health professionals
believe that babies should be continued on artificial baby milk
for at least nine months and even 12 months (and now that the
formula companies sell formulas for up to 18 months and even
three years, soon some health professionals will be urging mothers
to use formula for three years), but at the same time seem to
believe that breastmilk and breastfeeding are unnecessary and
even harmful if continued longer than six months. Why is the
imitation better than the original? Shouldn’t you wonder
what this line of reasoning implies? In most of the world, breastfeeding
to two or three years of age is common and normal, though, thanks
to good marketing of formula, less and less common.
8. S/he tells you that breastmilk has no nutritional
value after the baby is 6 months or older. Even if it were true,
there is still value in breastfeeding. Breastfeeding is a unique
interaction between two people in love even without the milk.
But it is not true. Breastmilk is still milk, with fat, protein,
calories, vitamins and the rest, and the antibodies and other
elements that protect the baby against infections are still
there, some in greater quantities than when the baby was younger.
Anyone who tells you this doesn’t know the first thing
about breastfeeding.
9. S/he tells you that you must never allow
your baby to fall asleep at the breast. Why not? It is fine
if a baby can also fall asleep without nursing, but one of the
advantages of breastfeeding is that you have a handy way of
putting your tired baby to sleep. Mothers around the world since
the beginning of mammalian time have done just that. One of
the great pleasures of parenthood is having a child fall asleep
in your arms, feeling the warmth he gives off as sleep overcomes
him. It is one of the pleasures of breastfeeding, both for the
mother and probably also for the baby, when the baby falls asleep
at the breast.
10. S/he tells you that you should not stay
in hospital to nurse your sick child because it is important
you rest at home. It is important you rest, and the hospital
that is supportive of breastfeeding will arrange it so that
you can rest while you stay in the hospital to nurse your baby.
Sick babies do not need breastfeeding less than a healthy baby,
they need it more.
11. S/he does not try to get you help if you
are having trouble with breastfeeding. Most problems can be
prevented or cured, and most of the time the answer to breastfeeding
problems is not giving formula. Unfortunately, many health professionals,
particularly physicians, and even more particularly pediatricians,
do not know how to help. But there is help out there. Insist
on getting it. “You don’t have to breastfeed to
be a good mother”, is true, but not an answer to a breastfeeding
problem.
Questions? (416) 813-5757 (option 3) or drjacknewman@sympatico.ca
or my book Dr. Jack Newman’s Guide to Breastfeeding (called
The Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)
Handout #18. How to Know a Health Professional is not Supportive
of Breastfeeding. Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005
This handout may be copied and distributed without further
permission,
on the condition that it is not used in any context in which
the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated
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