Friday, June 19, 2009
Don't go back to work for two years - if you want a happy baby
Click on the title of this post to be redirected to the original article. I don't see it as a bash on working mothers as I'm sure if we all could, we would stay home with our little ones. Luckily I was fortunate enough to build a nice little savings and my husband picked up two jobs that I was able to remain at home with our daughter and in this day and age not all family situations are so fortunate.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Tell Congress to Support the Breastfeeding Promotion Act
On June 11, 2009, Representative Carolyn B. Maloney (NY) and Senator Jeff Merkley (OR) introduced the Breastfeeding Promotion Act in both houses of Congress, to provide a unified national policy to keep mothers, their children, and their communities healthy. This is the first time the bill has been introduced in the Senate.
The Breastfeeding Promotion Act (H.R. 2819, S. 1244) includes five provisions:
Amends the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to protect breastfeeding women from being fired or discriminated against in the workplace.
Provides tax incentives for businesses that establish private lactation areas in the workplace, or provide breastfeeding equipment or consultation services to their employees.
Provides for a performance standard to ensure breast pumps are safe and effective.
Allows breastfeeding equipment and consultation services to be tax deductible for families (amends Internal Revenue Code definition of "medical care").
Protects the privacy of breastfeeding mothers by ensuring they have break time and a private place to pump (applies to employers with 50 or more employees, see text of legislation for details).
Copy & Paste the link below in a new browser to send a letter to congress or click on the title of this post to be redirected
http://www.usbreastfeeding.org/LegislationPolicy/ActionCampaigns/BreastfeedingPromotionAct/tabid/115/Default.aspx
Formula Fed America
Sneak Peek
Monday, May 11, 2009
Sunday, May 3, 2009
CASTING CALL!!
+ Currently Breastfeeding
+ Pregnant & considering breastfeeding
+ Working & Breastfeeding
+ Tried breastfeeding but gave up
+ Breastfed for a short period but stopped due to returning to the workforce
+ Lactation Professional
+ Doctor or other medical professional
+ Anthropologist with background in breastfeeding
+ Mother of a breastfeeding toddler
+ Mother who formula fed in the past but is now breastfeeding
+ Was told you "didn't have enough milk"
+ Was recommended to discontinue breastfeeding by a medical professional
+ Discontinued breastfeeding from outside pressure (spouse, family, work)
+ Encountered difficulties in breastfeeding
+ Experienced public disgust for breastfeeding
+ Breastfeeding Activist or "Lactivist"
+ Fervent Formula Supporter
If you feel you fit in with one of the above statements & live in or will be in the state of AZ or southern CA please email breastfeedingmomma@live.com with "breastfeeding documentary" in the subject line to set up an interview.
If you would like to support the "Milk Money" Project just need more info click on the title of this post to be redirected to a site that is accepting donations.
Help make this happen!!
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Where to go if you need help!!
They have breastfeeding forums, where to attend breastfeeding support groups with other moms in your area & tons of helpful info!
KellyMom: www.kellymom.com
Lots & lots of tips, tricks & answers to all kinds of obstacles we face breastfeeding
ILCA: www.ilca.org
Find a Board Certified Laction Consultant in your area
Normal Fed: www.normalfed.com
Inspiring essays and articles plus helpful information provided by the esteemed Diane Weissinger
The Lighter Side: www.thecowgoddess.com & www.mama-is.com
Heather Cushman-Dowdee's website and clever, "makes you think" points of view on breastfeeding, birth and mothering
3 minute Lactivist!
Friday, May 1, 2009
The Simple Truth. Breast is Not Best.
"The truth is, breastfeeding is nothing more than normal. Artificial feeding, which is neither the same nor superior, is therefore deficient, incomplete, and inferior. These are difficult words, but they have an appropriate place in our vocabulary."
"Best possible, ideal, optimal, perfect. Are you the best possible parent? Is your home life ideal? Do you provide optimal meals? Of course not. Those are admirable goals, not minimum standards. Let's rephrase. Is your parenting inadequate? Is your home life subnormal? Do you provide deficient meals? Now it hurts. You may not expect to be far above normal, but you certainly don't want to be below normal. "
"Advantages. When we talk about the advantages of breastfeeding--the "lower rates" of cancer, the "reduced risk" of allergies, the "enhanced" bonding, the "stronger" immune system--we reinforce bottlefeeding yet again as the accepted, acceptable norm. "
"Health comparisons use a biological, not cultural, norm, whether the deviation is harmful or helpful. Smokers have higher rates of illness; increasing prenatal folic acid may reduce fetal defects. Because breastfeeding is the biological norm, breastfed babies are not "healthier;" artificially-fed babies are ill more often and more seriously. Breastfed babies do not "smell better;" artificial feeding results in an abnormal and unpleasant odor that reflects problems in an infant's gut. We cannot expect to create a breastfeeding culture if we do not insist on a breastfeeding model of health in both our language and our literature. "
"We must not let inverted phrasing by the media and by our peers go unchallenged. When we fail to describe the hazards of artificial feeding, we deprive mothers of crucial decision-making information. The mother having difficulty with breastfeeding may not seek help just to achieve a "special bonus;" but she may clamor for help if she knows how much she and her baby stand to lose. She is less likely to use artificial milk just "to get him used to a bottle" if she knows that the contents of that bottle cause harm."
"Special. "Breastfeeding is a special relationship." "Set up a special nursing corner." In or family, special meals take extra time. Special occasions mean extra work. Special is nice, but it is complicated, it is not an ongoing part of life, and it is not something we want to do very often. For most women, nursing must fit easily into a busy life--and, of course, it does. "Special" is weaning advice, not breastfeeding advice."
"The mother who opts not to breastfeed, or who does not do so as long as she planned, is doing the best she can with the resources at hand. She may have had the standard "breast is best" spiel ......and she may have seen a few mothers nursing at the mall ..... That is clearly not enough information or training. But she may still feel guilty. She's female."
"Women ...told me they would feel angry, betrayed, cheated. They would wish they could do it over with better information. They would feel regret for opportunities lost. Some of the women said they would feel guilty for not having sought out more opinions, for not having persevered in the absence of information and support. But gender-engendered guilt aside, we do not feel guilty about having been deprived of a pleasure. The mother who does not breastfeed impairs her own health, increases the difficulty and expense of infant and child rearing, an dismisses one of life's most delightful relationships. She has lost something basic to her own well-being. What image of the satisfactions of breastfeeding do we convey when we use the word "guilt"?"
"Let's rephrase, using the words women themselves gave me: "We don't want to make bottlefeeding mothers feel angry. We don't want to make them feel betrayed. We don't want to make them feel cheated." Peel back the layered implications of "we don't want to make them feel guilty," and you will find a system trying to cover its own tracks. It is not trying to protect her. It is trying to protect itself. Let's level with mothers, support them when breastfeeding doesn't work, and help them move beyond this inaccurate and ineffective word."
"Pros and cons, advantages and disadvantages. Breastfeeding is a straight-forward health issue, not one of two equivlent choices. "One disadvantage of not smoking is that you are more likely to find secondhand smoke annoying. One advantage of smoking is that it can contribute to weight loss." The real issue is differential morbidity and mortality. The rest--whether we are talking about tobacco or commercial baby milks--is just smoke."
"It is the parents' choice to make. True. But deliberately stepping out of the process implies that the "balanced" list was accurate. In a recent issue of Parenting magazine, a pediatrician comments, "When I first visit a new mother in the hospital, I ask, 'Are you breastfeeding or bottlefeeding?' If she says she is going to bottlefeed, I nod and move on to my next questions. Supporting new parents means supporting them in whatever choices they make; you don't march in postpartum and tell someone she's making a terrible mistake, depriving herself and her child."
"Yet if a woman announced to her doctor, midway through a routine physical examination, that she took up smoking a few days earlier, the physician would make sure she understood the hazards, reasoning that now was the easiest time for her to change her mind. It is hypocritical and irresponsible to take a clear position on smoking and "let parents decide" about breastfeeding without first making sure of their information base. Life choices are always the individual's to make. That does not mean his or her information sources should be mute, nor that the parents who opt for bottlefeeding should be denied information that might prompt a different decision with a subsequent child."
As mothers I am surprised that we aren't demanding change from the medical field to have provided us with adequate help & resources that may have salvaged a majority of our breastfeeding relationships. Instead we are at odds with each other split in to two groups: breastfeeding & bottle feeding. Each side never feeling validated and constantly fighting society which subsequently includes formula companies who contnue to stand to make billions off of our ignorance and non chalant acceptance of formula as a way to feed our babies.
We can only do so much with the information & support we have.
So What's In Formula??
Unfortunetly feeding our babies formula has become the norm, no questions asked. Moms typically give up breastfeeding (if it was initiated in the first place) when they return to work or after encountering a road block and using formula as the solution because we have no "sisterhood" or "village" to turn to with a lifetime of breastfeeding experience under their belts. No second thoughts. I have to admit I didn't see anything wrong with it either. I mean I was formula fed and turned out ok. Now I know better.
I advise you to keep an open mind when learning what formula is all about and what's in it especially if you have formula fed in the past. No parent wants to admit they are openly putting their babies at risk but the reality is nothing is without risk, there is an acceptable rate of contamination in all the food we eat formula being no exception. We also have to accept as a society the frank truth that when we are physiologically made to consume breastmilk and yet give our bodies (growing at an exponetial rate) a man made food there are going to be consequences. Whether they be acute or chronic illness or never appear at all. We are CHOOSING to take those risks.
Breastmilk is also free. A womens time is not but after the intial investment of that time to establish a successful breastfeeding relationship breastfeeding can be as natural and simple as changing a diaper or giving baby a bath. When we have children our lives are going to change drastically whether we would like it to or not and being forever tethered to our babes' in one way or another isn't going to change. All selfishness goes out the window. The billion-dollar formula industry-two million dollars a day-is about money, not public health.
As mothers we are willing to give our life for our children. To breastfeed is to literally continue to give life to our children.
Back to the topic lol, I won't include everything in the variety of formulas for the sake of keeping it short & due to the variety of formulas, but I will include what I can,
Milk-Based Formula: The obvious base for this formula is good old cows milk, interestingly enough cows milk is NOT the most similar to human milk, horse milk is. Unlike cows, horses have only two teats and a 1,400 lb. mare will produce less than a quart of the precious liquid each day. Therefore cows which have 4 teats and produce quite alot more milk are used. Cows milk proteins are one of the most common allergens among infants and small children. Whey, one of the main ingredients in almost all formulas, is a waste by-product of producing certain dairy products, particularly cheeses. Palm, coconut and safflower oils are some of the least expensive oils, and so are used in many snack foods, and such things as movie theatre popcorn, also processed using high temperatures and chemicals, bleached and deodorized. Likely to be rancid. Carrageenan which is extremely hard to digest. In most ready-mixed formulas, carrageenan is one of the main causes of digestive disorders in formula-fed infants, not lactose-intolerance. it caused liver problems and retarded growth in rats. There are also synthetic vitamins which often have the opposite effect of vitamins naturally occurring in food. Free Glutamic Acid (MSG) and Aspartic Acid; neurotoxins formed during processing of milk and soy protein powders. Levels are especially high in hypoallergenic formulas.
Hypoallergenic or Hydrolisate Formula: Expensive, taste even worse than regular formula and still a health risk. Basically a "pre-digested" formula with similar ingredients meant for babies who have trouble or cannot break down the bovine (cow) protein themselves. Uses corn syrup instead of lactose, ( Lactose is a natural sugar in milk that provides a source of energy and contributes to the development of your baby’s brain and central nervous system. Because lactose releases its energy at a slow, steady pace, it doesn’t contribute to the highs and lows in blood sugar normally associated with sucrose, which is the sugar that is often added to formula. Human milk contains 50 percent more lactose than cow’s milk.), therefore a SIGNIFICANT drawback for longterm use.
Low-Iron Formula: Makes the most sense to use with a baby who is breastfeed part-time. Breastmilk will provide for most of babies' iron needs, not the case for primarly formula fed babies. Again similar ingredients to the milk based formulas. Since iron is poorly absorbed through babies' system quite a bit needs to be added which can than in turn be hard on babies' system. Iron is necessary so it cannot just be left out unless your baby shows intolerance to a higher iron formula this shouldn't be used.
Powdered Formula: If presented with the choice, I recommend ALWAYS use liquid or ready to feed. Powdered formula can never be sterilized and is therefore never sterile something to consider since formula fed babies' lack the immune system of breastfed babies. Life-threatening cases of bacterial meningitis in babies up to a year old have resulted in the feeding of powdered formula that was contaminated in the factory. Besides the acceptable rate of contamination in anything we consume, whats a few rats hairs in a couple cans of formula right? The most severe cases of bacterial infection involve babies exposed to a bacteria called Enterobacter Sakazakii or E-sak. The Center for Disease Control notes e-sak can lead to raging infections, severe brain damage and ultimately death. Water is called to be heated for formula to make it safer and formula unfinished by baby should be thrown away and not left out due to the culmination of bacteria that can make your baby extremely sick. The lining of both liquid and powder cans contain BPA. (Low doses of bisphenol A can mimic the body's own hormones possibly causing negative health effects. There is thus concern that long term low dose exposure to bisphenol A may induce chronic toxicity in humans right now.)
ADA/DHA Enriched Formulas: ADA & DHA are polyunsaturated omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids important components of the human brain and eyes and are naturally present in human breast milk. The ADA/DHA Enriched Formulas are becoming increasingly popular due to their risky marketing, but there is no solid research to say they do ANYTHING more than increase the cost & digestive upsets to baby. Infant formulas containing DHA- and ARA- oils are novel foods—extracted from laboratory-grown fermented algae and fungus and processed utilizing a neurotoxic chemical, hexane. These algal and fungal oils provide DHA and ARA in forms that are structurally different from those naturally found in human milk. A quote from a Martek (company that produces the DHA/ARA) investment promotion from 1996, which reads as follows: “Even if [the DHA/ARA blend] has no benefit, we think it would be widely incorporated into formulas, as a marketing tool and to allow companies to promote their formula as ‘closest to human milk' Some studies have reported unexpected deaths among infants who consumed formula supplemented with long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. These unexpected deaths were attributed to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), sepsis or necrotizing enterocolitis.
Soy Formulas: Not milk and should not be first choice. Contain no lactose (again crucial to babies' brain development), Highly processed, contains phytoestrogens that can adversely affect baby's hormonal development and depress thyroid function. Does NOT have FDA GRAS (generally recognized as safe) status. It is known that the thymus (very important part of our childhood immune system) is significantly smaller in infants raised on soy based formula. The main ingredient in soy infant formula is soy protein isolate, a powder extracted from soybeans through a process that involves not only high temperatures but also caustic chemicals. The alkaline soaking solution produces a carcinogen, lysinealine, and reduces the cystine content, which is already low in the soybean. Other carcinogens called nitrosamines are formed during high temperature spray drying.
Homemade formulas are never a good idea since baby can only consume what ever we feed them. If it is not a complete food that you are further risking your babies' health, things like too many minerals can cause kidney damage. Organic Formulas are relatively new and may focus more on being organic than balance the right ingredients.
There is no formula that does a good job imitating breastmilk. The less formula used the less risk. Pumping may not be the most enjoyable task but neither is changing diapers or going without sleep. Breastmilk is a life long gift of health to your baby and they deserve it!
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Blog Revived
So Come Check Me Out NOW at http://www.breastfeedingmomma.com
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Breast-Feeding Support Lacking at Many Hospitals, Birth Centers
The U.S. Centers for disease control and prevention conducted a study last year looking at seven areas of care for women who chose to breastfeed their infants.
We scored incredibly low.
I'm not sure if that has to do with the small amount of women who chose to breastfeed as opposed to the care MANY women would have received if our hospitals just went baby friendly and assumed every women in there was going to breastfeed. I think if some of us women just received that extra push and support, that could lead to many successful breastfeeding relationships resulting in higher numbers.
Western and New England States scored among the highest while southern states scored among the lowest. Keep in mind the "high" wasn't very high at all.
The findings were published in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
"These findings underscore the importance of improving the way hospitals and birth centers provide assistance, encouragement and support for breast-feeding," Laurence Grummer-Strawn, chief of the nutrition branch in CDC's Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity, said in a prepared statement. "We have a great deal of work to do to accomplish our national objectives related to breast-feeding, and birth facilities can make a huge contribution to this effort."
I agree whole-heartedly Laurence Grummer-Strawn! We have a great deal of work to accomplish in relation to our national objectives to breastfeeding.
Re-enforcing my whole view on working to make Arizona's hospitals baby friendly a priority!
Thursday, August 28, 2008
"Babywise" Book Not So Wise ........
As new parents its not surprising that we get bombarded even with all kinds of parenting advice. One that can actually negatively affect anyone whether breastfeeding or not (but especially breastfeeding) is "Babywise"
The book condones a feeding schedule for babies, called Parent Directed Feeding (PDF), thats consists of feeding newborns at intervals of three to three and one-half hours (described as two and one-half to three hours from the end of the last 30-minute feeding) beginning at birth. With nighttime feedings eliminated at eight weeks. First off, this completely goes against letting a baby listen to his/her own hunger cues, like I have written before, babies are humans just like us and we eat whenever we want.
This advice is completely against the latest AAP recommendations on newborn feeding which is (AAP Policy Statement, "Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk," Pediatrics, Dec. 1997): "Newborns should be nursed whenever they show signs of hunger, such as increased alertness or activity, mouthing, or rooting. Crying is a late indicator of hunger. Newborns should be nursed approximately eight to 12 times every 24 hours until satiety."I simply do no understand America's obsession with controlling how their babies develop from birth. Just having a child will permanently change your life. We shouldn't be selfish enough to expect our babies to conform & mold themselves to be convenient for us. Hey, they are the new ones in this world and it is our job to let them grow in to their own people.
Now onto how this method of infant scheduling hurts breastfeeding:
(taken from the article)
Unfortunately, the schedule in "Babywise" does not take into account differences among breastfeeding women and babies. According to one report, differences of up to 300 percent in the maximum milk storage capacity of women's breasts mean that, although women have the capability of producing the same amount of milk over a 24-hour period for their infants, some will have to breastfeed far more frequently than others to maintain that supply. Babies must feed when they need to, with intervals and duration determined according to a variety of factors in temperament, environment, and physiological make-up. Averages may fit into a bell-shaped curve, but some babies will require shorter intervals. (Daly S., Hartmann P. "Infant demand and milk supply, Part 2. The short-term control of milk synthesis in lactating women." Journal of Human Lactation; 11; (1):27-37).
The book also goes on to make ridiculous claims such as:
"Lack of regularity [in feeding intervals] sends a negative signal to the baby's body, creating metabolic confusion that negatively affects his or her hunger, digestive, and sleep/wake cycles."
"Demand-fed babies don't sleep through the night." "A mother who takes her baby to her breast 12, 15, or 20 times a day will not produce any more milk than the mom who takes her baby to breast six to seven times a day."
"Mothers following PDF have little or no problem with the let down reflex, compared to those who demand-feed."
"Colic, which basically is a spasm in the baby's intestinal tract that causes pain, is very rare in PDF babies but is intensified in demand-fed babies."
"In our opinion, much more developmental damage is done to a child by holding him or her constantly than by putting the baby down. In terms of biomechanics alone, carrying a baby in a sling can increase neck and back problems, or even create them."
"Some researchers suggest that putting a baby on his or her back for sleep, rather than on the baby's tummy, will reduce the chance of crib death. That research is not conclusive, and the method of gathering supportive data is questionable."
He also has absolutely no medical backup or citations to support such data. The author himself has no medical background.
In my opinion this book has breastfeeding problems galore written all over it and I would suggest to stay away. Babies know nothing else than that they crave warmth, security, your love, and nourishment. This book will show you how to do the opposite.
When The Going Gets Tough
Unfortunately that is not always the case and mothers just as you and I sometimes just need some inspiration & encouragement.
Breastfeeding problems more often than not have solutions. To persevere through the solution and get rid of the problem is where our spirits usually begin to falter. Having to try multiple times and multiples ways can be wearing on a mother because the fact is, not being able to breastfeed successfully is emotionally tough and sometimes formula may seem like "the better provider"
That is not true.
Formula is just something that will help your baby get by until breastfeeding is fixed. Nothing can replace momma! Like I said more often than not the obstacles we encounter whilst breastfeeding can be overcome! Formula is not a special potion that will make all your problems go away. As ANY breastfeeding mom will tell you there are many possibilities for problems from sore nipples to low supply to latch and so on. Those may go away with formula but your emotional ties to breastfeeding your child will not. And than there will be NEW problems. Just not breastfeeding ones.
Keys to remember while trying to fix any breastfeeding problem are:
Remain Relaxed. You Can Do It!! Take time to analyze the situation, remember why you are doing what your doing & love your baby. Love, Love your baby. Browse the internet and watch a few breastfeeding videos, read a breastfeeding book. Take fresh approaches to solutions and keep an open mind. Practice relaxation techniques. When it gets too overwhelming take a step back and use a break. Try one solution at a time and give it a few tries. Let your baby be the one who directs the show. We all know the more fussy a baby gets, the harder it is to slow down and relax.
Get Rid Of ANY Negativity. Don't let anyone get you down. This is your decision and anything worth doing is hardly ever easy. If no one has anything positive or encouraging to say, ask them to not say anything at all. Make a special breastfeeding area where you can tackle your problems with a positive outlook and forget about the rest of the world and it's distractions. Fully equip your area with supportive pillows, a glass of water, near a window, put up some inspirational artwork, or maybe have some calming music playing nearby.
VENT! Nothing helps your soul feel lighter by getting your frustration out. Write (or type for that matter) a journal, rip up a magazine, throw a dish on the ground outside. Anything to help release any pent up frustration or impatience you may begin to feel. Taking your anger out on someone just makes it harder to relax and can make you feel down. So take it out on a piece of paper, draw a picture, or call a friend.
Remember no matter what you are the best provider for your little one and to try and work as hard as you do, you know because you want the best for that little baby. Don't ever feel like you failed.
Monday, August 25, 2008
Nursing In Public Is Not A Crime!
Arizona
Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann § 41-1443 (2006) provides that indecent exposure does not include an act of breast-feeding by a mother and entitles a mother to breast-feed in any public place where the mother is otherwise lawfully present.
Kate Garraway faces outcry with provacative photoshoot breastfeeding calf
Obviously Kate Garraway is not breastfeeding the calf, but it makes you think. If a women can't or doesn't breastfeed this is exactly what we are doing. Feeding our babies the milk from another species. This picture just makes us think, if a cow couldn't nurse her calf would us humans than provide the milk? No we would give it the milk of another cow. Why is it that we can't do the same? Why do we feel its ok to feed our infants another species milk?You can copy and paste the link below for the full story or just click on the title of this post to be re-directed.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1048622/Kate-Garraway-faces-outcry-provocative-photoshoot-shows-breastfeeding-calf.html
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Fussy Baby
Once you and baby learn the most basic steps, (latch, positioning & getting past the initial problems) nursing takes on a direction of its own. At this point you & and your baby will have developed your own system. It doesn't have to match the way your friend breastfed her baby or the way your mother or grandmother breastfed their babies. Your may come to learn that your baby eats from both sides all the time, or only one side, or nurses especially fast. Whatever the case may be. If it's working for you and your baby and he/she is gaining weight than that's the right way
for you.
Breastfeeding isn't supposed to be formal, or a big complicated ordeal. It's as natural as kissing or hugging your baby whenever you'd like. If you come to find your darling little one is fussier than usual be sure to completely empty one breast before you offer the other. The milk that "let's down" in the beginning is the watery fore milk that initially quenches your baby's thirst. If you only let her receive this from both breasts before she/he gets to the creamier high calorie hind milk that comes out later he/she may end up with not enough high fat milk which will in turn upset her/his intestines resulting in a gassy and this colicky baby. Which is why its important to never time a baby's length at breast and just let baby tell you when they're done.
When it comes to food, babies are people too. Like you and me. Something I think we tend to forget more often than not. As humans we get the urge to eat about every 90 min. More so if we're in front of the TV I'm sure. Babies are also trying to double their weight in a short amount of time and than some! Whenever your baby seems fussy, offer your breast. Of course it may also be something else i.e. diaper change, baby is too warm etc. If baby seems to always be nursing and is not gaining well, contact an IBCLC. It may be something as simple to fix as a latch problem. More often than not physicians are quick to resort to formula to avoid making the mother feel bad but I think that actually made me feel more inadequate than I already did and fixing the breastfeeding problem is always a better option than the last resort; formula.
Saturday, August 23, 2008
La Leche League
Upcoming Meetings!! Click Here and go to meeting information on the left to find the closest meeting to you!!
Friday, August 22, 2008
If you use artificial baby milk, just some things to be aware of
That's why you have to heat the water - not to make the water safe, but to make the powder safer. Because of the presence of these bugs, the WHO* recommends that newborns under 8 weeks old do not receive powdered formula, but only have UHT sterile liquid packs.
Not only are there bugs in some batches of powdered formula, once made up, formula is an excellent growth medium for them. So formula safety is crucial if you're using it. In the UK, 5 times more formula fed babies are treated in hospital for gastroenteritis than breastfed ones. Good hygiene is vital in protecting your baby:
Left over formula that's been fed to a baby should be thrown away after one hour.
These risks from contanimated formula are bad enough, but if you live in a resource poor area, where there is poor hygiene and dirty water, formula feeding kills 3500 babies every day. And formula companies relentlessly push their products in these areas, regardless of the death toll.
*World Health Organization
Tricks Of The Infant Food Industry
Food for your brain!!
Just an excerpt:
US INFANT FORMULA RECALLS 1982-1994
| Year | Problem | Product | Class |
| 1994 | Klebsiella and pseudomona contaminants | Nursoy concentrate (Wyeth Labs) | II |
| 1993 | Salmonella contamination | Soyalac (Nutricia Inc.) | I |
| 1993 | Glass contamination | Nutramigen (Mead Johnson) | II |
| 1993 | Peeling can lining | Isomil Soy Formula with iron (Ross Labs) | III |
| 1990 | Bacterial contamination | I-Soylac Concentrated Formula (Loma Linda) | I |
| 1989 | Deficient in vitamin D, below label claim for vitamin K | Similac PM60/40 low iron (Ross Labs) | III |
| 1989 | Unfit appearance, didn't pass through bottle nipple | Carnation Good Nature (Nestlé) | III |
| 1989 | Deficient in vitamin D | Nutramigen iron fortified protein hydrolysate | III |
| 1986 | Progressive vitamin A degradation | Soyalac powder (Loma Linda) | III |
| 1986 | Curdling, discoloration | SMA Ready to Feed (Wyeth Labs) | II |
| 1985 | Superpotent vitamin A levels | Gerber Meat Base Formula with iron (Gerber) | II |
| 1985 | Deficient in folacin, vitamin D and zinc | Kama-Mil powder (Kama Nutritional Products) | I |
| 1985 | Pamphlet erroneously suggests can be used as substitute for human milk | Edensoy (Eden Foods) | I |
| 1985 | Deficient in copper and linoleic acid | Cow & Gate Improved Modified Infant Formula | II |
| 1985 | Deficient in copper and linoleic acid | Lactogen with iron (Nestlé) | III |
| 1985 | Glass particles (from bottle chipping) | 5% glucose water (Ross Labs) | II |
| 1985 | Overprocessed, lumpy, brown, unfit for human consumption | Similac with iron (Ross Labs) | II |
| 1983 | Deficient in vitamin A | Soyalac Powder Milk Free Fortified Soy Formula | II |
| 1983 | Copper, thiamine and vitamin B6 too low | Naturalac Infant formula (Filmore Foods) | II |
| 1982 | Deficient in vitamin B6 | Nursoy Concentrated Liquid (Wyeth Laboratores) | I |
| 1982 | Deficient in vitamin B6 | SMA brands (Wyeth Labs) | I |
Class I: May cause serious health consequences.
Class II: May cause medically reversible health conditions.
Class III: Not likely to cause medically adverse health effects.
Adopted from Milk, Money and Madness 1995
Also, there is an acceptable rate of contamination in any foods we eat. What's a few rat hairs in a million cans of formula anyway, right?
Everyone knows its best for baby, Did you know it was best for MOM?
Everyone knows the endless list of benefits for baby when it comes to breastfeeding. It's the most natural way to nourish an infant! Not only does it change to suit the babies needs at every feeding, it's composition even changes throughout the feeding. From the watery fore milk in the beginning to satisfy babies thirst to the thicker hind milk towards the end providing baby with the calories they need and than the slower almost non existent flow afterwards providing baby with the comfort they crave from their mothers. You could never get this from Artificial Baby Milk in a bottle that remains the same in every feeding for the entire time your infant needs it.
But what about you? Mother's rarely know that the benefits of breastfeeding also extend to them! The physiology and behavior of mothers are influenced by the release of the hormones oxytocin, prolactin and cholecystokinin during breastfeeding.
Oxytocin is released in response to skin to skin contact and suckling at the breast. This hormone not only signals the breasts to release milk to the baby (this is known as the milk ejection reflex, or "let-down"), but simultaneously produces contractions in the uterus. The resulting contractions prevent postpartum hemorrhage and promote uterine involution (the return to a nonpregnant state).
(below copied from http://www.promom.org/101/)
Baby's suckling helps shrink mother's uterus after childbirth
The uterus of the non-breastfeeding mother will never shrink back to its pre-pregnant size. It will always remain slightly enlarged.
"Nursing will help you to regain your figure more quickly, since the process of lactation causes the uterus (which has increased during pregnancy to about 20 times its normal size) to shrink more quickly to its pre-pregnancy size. "
The Complete Book Of Breastfeeding M.S. Eiger. MD, S. Wendkos Olds, Copyright 1999, Workman Publishing Co., Inc., 708 Broadway, New York, NY 10003
Oxytocin is known to be essential for expression of maternal behavior in some mammals and although there isn't very much research there is some evidence that oxytocin is also involved in the development of maternal love in humans. Oxytocin also has a potent anti-stress impact on mothers.
Not breastfeeding increases mother's risk of breast cancer
Many studies have shown that women who breastfeed have lower risks of developing breast cancer. Recently, data from 47 studies in 30 countries was re-examined. The study group concluded that the incidence of breast cancer in developed countries could be reduced by more than half if women had the number of births and lifetime duration of breastfeeding that have been common in developing countries until recently. According to the analysis, breastfeeding could account for almost two-thirds of this estimated reduction in breast cancer incidence.
Jernstorm, H et al "Breast-feeding and the risk of breast cancer in BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers." J Natl Cancer Inst. 2004;96:1094-1098
Lee, SY et al "Effect of lifetime lactation on breast cancer risk: a Korean women's cohort study." Int J Cancer. 2003;105:390-393
Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer (2002). "Breast cancer and breastfeeding: collaborative reanalysis of individual data from 47 epidemiological studies in 30 countries, including 50,302 women with breast cancer and 96,973 women without the disease." Lancet 360: 187-95
Zheng et al, "Lactation Reduces Breast Cancer Risk in Shandong Province, China" Am. J. Epidemiol. Dec. 2000, 152 (12): 1129
Newcomb PA, Storer BE, Longnecker MP, et al. "Lactation and a reduced risk of premenopausal breast cancer." N Engl J Med. 1994;330:81-87
Not breastfeeding increases mother's risk of developing ovarian cancer
Based on the research, breastfeeding for a total of 12 to 24 months can reduce your risk of ovarian cancer by about one-third.
Hartage et al, "Rates and risks of ovarian cancer in subgroups of white women in the United States." Obstet Gynecol 1994 Nov; 84(5): 760-764
Rosenblatt KA, Thomas DB, "Lactation and the risk of Epithelial ovarian cancer". Int J Epidemiol. 1993;22:192-197
Gwinn ML, "Pregnancy, breastfeeding and oral contraceptives and the risk of Epithelial ovarian cancer." J. Clin. Epidemiol. 1990; 43:559-568
Nursing helps mom lose weight after baby is born
Breastfeeding requires an average of 500 extra calories per day and breastfeeding mothers who eat a normal diet lose the extra weight they gained during pregnancy faster than moms who choose to bottle feed. In one study, mothers who breastfed exclusively or partially had significantly larger reductions in hip circumference and were less above their pre-pregnancy weights at 1 month postpartum than mothers who fed formula exclusively.
Other studies have also shown that women who were overweight when they began their pregnancies can safely get closer to their ideal weight by breastfeeding in conjunction with a moderate exercise program.
DC.A. Lovelady et al "The effect of weight loss in overweight lactating women on the growth of their infants." New Eng Journal of Med, 2000; 342: 449-453
Kramer, F., "Breastfeeding reduces maternal lower body fat." J. Am Diet Assoc 1993; 93(4):429-33
Dewey KG, Heinig MJ, Nommwen LA. "Maternal weight-loss patterns during prolonged lactation. "Am J Clin Nutr 1993;58:162-166
Not breastfeeding increases mother's risk of developing endometrial cancer
A World Health Organization study has shown that the longer a woman breastfeeds, the less likely she is to get endometrial cancer.
Rosenblatt, KA et al "Prolonged lactation and endometrial cancer" Int. J. Epidemiol. 1995; 24:499-503
Breastfeeding acts like a natural tranquilizer for mom
Nursing mothers often joke about falling asleep on the job. The sleep inducing qualities of nursing a baby are remarkable. In fact, some new mothers have to be careful to hold a nursing baby in such a way that they will not drop the child when they inevitably nod off. Nursing in bed is a great solution. Even pumping at work can be a great way to calm down and get refocused during a stressful day. All this relaxation is caused by the hormone oxytocin, which is released each time a mother breastfeeds. It decreases blood pressure and calms the mother. Interestingly, one study found that there were far fewer incidences of domestic violence and sexual abuse in breastfeeding families
The Breastfeeding Book, Copyright 2000, M. Sears, R.N. and Wm. Sears, M.D.. Little Brown and Co.
Acheston, L, "Family violence and breastfeeding" Arch. Fam. Med. 1995, 4:650-652
Breastfeeding mothers spend less time and money on doctor visitsIn 1995 the Kaiser-Permanente Health Maintenance Organization in North Carolina found that formula-fed babies averaged over $1,400 more per year in additional health care costs than breastfed infants.
(Kaiser Permanente: Internal research to determine benefits of sponsoring an official lactation program - 1995)
A breastfeeding Mom gets more sleep
Especially if she sleeps with baby, but even if she doesn't. No bottles to prepare and warm. Less time comforting a crying baby suffering from gas and allergies.
Breastfeeding protects mothers against anemia (iron deficiency)
Since many exclusively breastfeeding mothers do not begin to menstruate for a year or longer their iron stores are not depleted by monthly bleeding during this time.
Breastfeeding mothers spend less money on menstrual supplies
Many breastfeeding moms do not begin to menstruate again until 14 or more months after giving birth. That means for 14 months, many nursing moms don't have to buy tampons, sanitary napkins, and cramp relief medication! "Multiply this by the four million US births each year to see that over one billion sanitary products annually could be kept out of our nation's landfills and sewers. To compound the scenario, because breast milk is absorbed by babies more efficiently, breastfed babies excrete less and thus require fewer diaper changes than formula-fed babies."
"Mother Nature Loves Breastmilk" D. Michels, Pub. various periodicals, available on Internet at http://members.aol.com/diamichels/greenbm.htm
Breastfeeding is a self confidence booster for mom
There is nothing more amazing than looking at a plump six month old baby and knowing that the only nutrition this happy little creature has received has come from your own body.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Delays......My milk never came in?
Being told I had no milk to feed my baby was utterly devastating to me and it hit me like the biggest blow to my face and the natural instincts I felt were supposed to kick in being a mother and having a child. I felt incomplete and frustrated with my own body, how it could betray me this way. So I gave up putting my baby to breast those first crucial weeks when all I should have been doing was putting my baby to breast so that the hormones in body would realize, baby needs milk! Kick in to high gear! I instead felt as though there was something physiologically wrong with me and stared at my empty breasts in anger. Well, what the hell did I need them for than? To sexually satisfy a man but not to feed my baby? The feminist in me kicked in and I wasn't going to give up.
That first week home my nipples cracked and bled and it hurt so bad every time I tried to put Ella to breast. I was formula feeding about 95% unless I was attempting to latch my baby on. I was beginning to hate breastfeeding and was about to give in to the "evil formula" that at the time seemed like a better provider than me.
My mother saved me. She went out and bought me the only pump she could afford. A single electric. On the 5th day after Ella was born "my milk came in" It had to have been the single most happiest day of my life. I had succeeded! I could feed my baby my milk! By this point I had been so psychologically and emotionally torn because of what the pediatrician told me I became apprehensive towards being able to provide "enough" milk. I kept thinking, if it took this long to come what if I couldn't make enough? So I exclusively pumped. Just so I could log & measure & schedule every feeding. Finally 7 weeks later I felt confident enough to put Ella at breast but I was constantly blaming every little fuss and cry on the fact that I couldn't tell how much milk she was getting and that maybe she wasn't getting enough. Slowly I was able to fix my confidence and transitioned to nursing on demand. 4 1/2 mo and 18lbs later I know my baby is getting enough and I haven't even started solids yet!
This entire psychological and emotional torment could have all been avoided if I had a better understanding of how breastfeeding worked and if I had never taken the pediatricians word to heart. My Lactation Educator instructor, Gini Baker RN, MPH, IBCLC said in class once, "The term, when your milk comes in, should be stricken from everyones mouth. Your milk was always there." Which is true. In pregnancy your body already began to make colostrum usually between the 4-6 mo. Your body begins to let down colostrum right after the birth of your baby. The colostrum; which is a thick, nutrient-rich milk produced by your breasts during your pregnancy and the first few days after your baby is born. It is the perfect first food for your baby, providing just the right amount of calories, nutrients, and antibodies to protect and nourish your new baby.
Colostrum is thick and sticky, and creamy yellow to orange in color. It is low in fat and high in carbohydrates, protein, and antibodies. It is extremely easy to digest and acts as a laxative, helping him or her to expel meconium and excess bilirubin, which can help prevent jaundice. It contains a large amount of the antibody secretory immunoglobulin (IgA), which protects the mucous membranes in your baby’s throat, lungs, and intestines. Colostrum also helps protect your baby from bacteria, viruses, and other toxic material by forming a protective film over your baby’s porous intestines to prevent any foreign substances from entering. Colostrum also contains high concentrations of protective white cells, called leukocytes, which destroy disease-causing bacteria and viruses.
Your breasts only produce a small amount of colostrum, but that’s all your newborn needs – or can handle – in the first few days. A one-day-old newborn’s stomach can only hold about 5 to 7 ml of liquid, or about the size of a small marble. By three days old, his stomach has grown to hold approximately 0.75 to 1 ounce, (about the size of a large marble) and by the end of his first week, his stomach can handle about 1.5 to 2 ounces of liquid, or about the size of a ping-pong ball. Newborns’ stomachs don’t stretch like older children’s do, so if they ingest too much milk, it will be spit up. Small and frequent feedings will ensure your baby receives all the nutrition necessary to thrive.
With consistent breastfeeding, (which I should have done! I received incorrect info from the pediatrician telling me to limit feedings to 10-15 min per breasts. Wrong!) your breasts will begin producing transitional milk by the third or fourth day after birth, and mature milk after approximately two weeks. As your mature milk comes in, it will appear thinner and whiter in color and the volume will increase while the concentration of antibodies decreases; however, the disease-fighting properties of breastmilk never completely disappear – your baby will continue to receive immunological protection as long as he or she breastfeeds.
What I wish I had known..........................Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Do you eat when your hungry?
Now in turn let me ask you a question. Do you eat when your hungry? Of course. If it wasn't time to eat but you were hungry would you wait another hour? Of course not.
So why do we expect babies to?
By breastfeeding your baby whenever she or he wants to, for as long as she or he wants to, you are doing two things. First, you are doing what's best to avoid milk supply problems, your breasts produce more milk when they are emptied. Second, you are showing your baby that she or he can count on you to meet her or his needs. This is the first step to becoming a secure and independent individual.
Here is how demand feeding works. After few weeks, your milk supply will be well established, and you'll also get used to your baby's signs. Then you can relax a little, act according to your baby's current needs.
Whenever your baby cries, offer her or him the breast first. If that doesn't work, you can try other things (like changing his or her diaper, cuddling, leaving her or him alone for a little bit to relax, or whatever works for your baby).
Let your baby nurse as long as he or she wants on the first breast. Then offer the second breast. He or she may or may not want to nurse. Remember it only takes one breast to feed a baby. We feed from both so that one doesn't get more engorged than the other.
Sleep with your baby or at least have your baby in your room. Demand feeding includes night time feeding too. A breastfed baby may get up to one third of her or his nutrition from night nursing. You are also less likely to get engorged or have mastitis this way.
If your baby has not shown any interest in nursing for about 2-3 hours (up to 4 hours at night) , offer the breast and try to get your baby to nurse.
These additional recommendations take you one step beyond demand feeding to natural breastfeeding.
In addition to nursing your baby whenever she or he needs to, nurse her or him whenever you need to. For example, if you feel that your breasts are getting engorged, see if your baby is willing to nurse. This is a much nicer way of relieving engorgement than hand expression or pumping.
If you start leaking milk, see if your baby wants to nurse. This is much nicer than pushing on your nipples to stop the milk flow.
If you just feel like a nice cuddle and nurse with your baby, see if she or he is interested.
Crying it out or Nursing to Sleep?
English psychotherapist, Sue Gerhardt, author of ‘Why Love Matters: How Affection Shapes a Baby’s Brain’, explains that when a baby is upset, the hypothalamus produces cortisol. In normal amounts cortisol is fine, but if a baby is exposed for too long or too often to stressful situations (such as being left to cry) its brain becomes flooded with cortisol and it will then either over- or under-produce cortisol whenever the child is exposed to stress. Too much cortisol is linked to depression and fearfulness; too little to emotional detachment and aggression.
Stress levels in infancy may have implications for learning, too. While it seems fairly obvious that a calm baby will be available for learning, studies have shown that children with the lowest scores on mental and motor ability tests were those with the highest cortisol levels in their blood. There is also research showing that children with anxiety disorders have a higher level of sleep difficulties as infants. Although these studies weren’t about controlled crying and I am making no direct connection, my point is that perhaps some of the babies who are presenting with sleep difficulties are infants who need extra help to regulate their emotions or are more sensitive to stress, so it is possible that these little people would be more at risk if they were exposed to controlled crying.
“…In that time of early life celebrated by paintings and icons of the Madonna and child, mother and baby may, if all goes well, find themselves in a kind of cocoon of peace and love. Breastfeeding itself inactivates the mother's own stress response; her amygdala expresses less CRF, presumably removing anxious, fearful feelings; whilst the prolactin generated by breastfeeding provides a feeling of tranquillity. The breastfeeding state of mind facilitates her ability to calm her baby and to manage his stress. Once established (and this is not always easy to achieve), breastfeeding can be a powerful source of sustenance for the mother as well as the baby.
She is then potentially more able to inhibit her baby's stress response and to ensure that his cortisol levels remain low. This is achieved through her presence, her feeding and her touch. The baby is protected from stress and discomfort and his brain responds by growing more cortisol neurons. A brain well stocked with cortisol receptors through this early experience will be better able to mop up this stress hormone when it is released in future. This furnishes the baby's brain with the capacity to stop producing cortisol when it has helped deal with a source of stress. The stress response will quickly be turned off when it is no longer needed.
But if the baby doesn't have this experience of being cocooned in a protective mother's arms, or if she is absent for too long, then his stress response can kick in and become active prematurely. The baby may become flooded with cortisol and the cortisol receptors will close down. This means that in the future he will have fewer cortisol receptors. The cortisol secreted at times of stress will not find enough receptor homes to go to, particularly in the hippocampus and hypothalamus, and will continue to wash around his brain, producing the high cortisol levels and the feeling that stress cannot be stopped. A reactive stress response will have been set up. There have been numerous studies linking depression with such a hyper-reactive stress response….”
My Point Being.....................
Nursing a Baby to sleep will not make them "clingy" or "spoiled" In fact it will make them more independent and confident in knowing that if they have a need it will be met and not only will it be met but with love. So nurse away mommas and get that sleep you all deserve!!
My Birth Story ........ Care for some Post-Partum Depression with that Breastfeeding Problem?
I went home and tried to sleep. At around 3am I couldn't any longer and my mom & I went for a walk around the apartment complex. My contractions were getting stronger, not exactly more painful, just uncomfortable. At around 6am we went back to the hospital. I was still 3cm. This time the nurse on shift smirks when I answer that I want a natural birth to her pain medication question. I was baffled at the lack of support for a womens decision in HER OWN birth plan.
I went home again. I hadn't slept. Noon comes around I go back to the hospital. Nurse tells me again I am not ready to have a natural birth because she tried and it didn't happen. Great Advice huh? Also I didn't go to a childbirth class, so what did I know? I didn't realize women had been doing this since the beginning of time without classes. What did they do then?
They sent me home after giving me an Ambien and said if I truly was in labor I wouldn't be able to sleep.
I couldn't sleep, I should've paid attention to that red flag in my mind at that point and stayed home.
4 o'clock rolls around. The contractions are pretty intense but I was still fine. Nothing like that nurse in the hospital said they would be. So I get to the point where I think I'm pretty close and if I wasn't 4 by now I was going to pass out from exhaustion.
I go back to the hospital. Now I can't talk through a contraction. The nurse has the nerve in this time to ask me, "Are you done feeling what natural labor feels like?" I was astonished. I couldn't think straight in a time like this, so I look over to my mother who was with me (my husband was rushing to come from Tuscon) and the nurse butts in, "She's not the one lying in that bed, you are, you need to make the decision!" I thought I already had, telling the nurses when they checked me in to triage that I didn't want pain medication. She proceeds, "What? Do you see women who have had natural labor walking around with gold stars on their foreheads?"
I was livid but because of my contractions I couldn't respond. I shouldn't have had to deal with that. I asked her if I was 4cm yet, she shook her head no. In disbelief I asked, "I'm still only 3?" and she left the room. Than she came back and said have you decided? (about the epidural) Than she told me I was only 6cm. I figured this was the extent of my pain tolerance and submitted to the epidural because I had no idea how long it would take to get me to 10. Within minutes the anesthesiologist was in administering the epidural. While he was injecting the medication he was chatting with the nurse about how this was a special epidural because I was so far dilated. The nurse asked how dilated I was and he said 9cm. I WAS SHOCKED. No other vaginal exam had been done except for the one by the nurse who told me I was only 6. I filed a complaint with the hospital because she had lied to me. I couldn't speak during a contraction because I was already in transition and ready to push. I wasn't informed of the risks of an epidural at such an advanced stage of labor either.
Than I had to deal with a pediatrician (which I changed) who didn't know a thing about breastfeeding, told me I had no milk and sent me home with enough formula to last me a month.
I was depressed.
Thankfully I didn't give up and went on a mission to educate myself and now am successfully exclusively breastfeeding my 4 1/2 mo old. I know there are plenty of women out there who believed what they were told and gave up. I find this to be very sad and have a deep need to change this. Point being, hospitals are not respecting women's right and decisions! Let me know your birth stories ladies! Send me a note!
Monday, August 18, 2008
The Deadly Influence of Formula
This brings us face to face with the safety and effectiveness of infant formula as a breast milk substitute. Is formula actually as safe as we have been led to believe? In fact, the answer is a resounding “no.” In fact, the use of infant formula doubles the risk of infant death for American babies.
While the dangers of formula feeding aren’t something you’re likely to hear in your doctor’s office, the conclusions can be derived through an examination of the available scientific research on infant mortality in the United States and across the world. There are studies showing artificial feeding’s impact on overall infant death rates in both developing and undeveloped countries. While studies offering comparative death rates are not available for industrialized regions, there are numerous studies providing comparative occurrence rates for many illnesses and disorders in the United States and other industrialized nations. Many more reports are available extolling superior survival rates and decreased illness rates among breastfed infants, but only those with solid numbers are useful here. We can assemble the statistics from these studies to build a firm picture of the ratio of infant deaths for U.S. formula-fed babies against those who are breastfed.
Calculating Formula’s Final Impact
| Cause of death | Actual U.S. infant deaths (1999) | Relative risk for formula-fed infants | Estimated IMR for breastfed babies | Deaths if all were breastfed | Deaths if all were formula-fed | Lives saved if all were breastfed |
| Congenital abnormality | 5500 | 1.5 | 1.1 | 4400 | 6600 | 1100 |
| Prematurity | 4500 | 2.5 | .643 | 2570 | 6430 | 1930 |
| SIDS | 2700 | 4 | .27 | 1080 | 4320 | 1620 |
| Complications of pregnancy & birth | 2400 | 1.25 | .533 | 2135 | 2670 | 270 |
| Respiratory distress & infections | 1750 | 4 | .175 | 700 | 2800 | 1050 |
| Accidents | 850 | 1 | .213 | 850 | 850 | 0 |
| Bacterial infection | 700 | 3 | .087 | 350 | 1050 | 350 |
| Circulatory problems | 650 | 1.5 | .13 | 520 | 780 | 130 |
| Necrotizing enterocolitis | 400 | 8 | .022 | 90 | 710 | 310 |
| Diarrhea | 300 | 2.5 | .043 | 170 | 430 | 130 |
| Meningitis | 100 | 3 | .014 | 55 | 170 | 45 |
| Cancer | 100 | 2 | .02 | 80 | 160 | 20 |
| SUBTOTALS | 19950 | 2.075 | 3.25 | 13000 | 26970 | 6955 |
| All other | 8050 | 2 | 1.6 | 6440 | 12880 | 1610 |
| TOTALS | 28000 | 2 | 4.7 | 18665 | 37335 IMR 9.4 | 9335 |
Infant Mortality Rates (IMR) are the number of infant deaths per 1,000 live births, from 0 to 12 months of age.
Based on the current U.S. infant death rate of 6.7 and an average breastfeeding rate of 50%, the American infant mortality rate would climb to 9.4 if all infants were formula-fed and would drop to 4.7 if all were breastfed. Twenty-two nations with high rates of breastfeeding have infant mortality rates below 5, while the United States ranks higher in infant death than 41 other nations. Clearly, lower rates for the United States are a possibility.
The ugly truth about formula
From the above statistics, we see that formula feeding costs American babies three or four additional lives per thousand. The final relative risk for formula feeding comes out to 2 – that’s double the risk of death for American infants who are fed with formula, compared with babies who are fed naturally.
A multitude of studies demonstrate that when breastfeeding is accompanied by formula supplementation, illness and death rates are much closer to those of babies who are fully formula-fed. Studies also reveal conclusively that the longer breastfeeding lasts, the greater the measurable difference in illness and death rates.
And beyond the first year
While the extent of breast milk’s health protection declines with age, a great number of studies demonstrate the continued survival advantage of breastfeeding through the second year and beyond. A World Health Organization study of less-developed countries found a doubled risk of death in the second year of life for those weaned prematurely or never receiving breast milk. A study in The Netherlands found a strong correlation between the extent of breastfeeding and the number of illnesses in children. Significant protection from breastfeeding was noted during the first three years of life. Other studies show a sizeable increase in illnesses throughout all of childhood for those who were never breastfed or prematurely weaned. In fact, an increased risk of death throughout life has been well documented for people who were formula-fed. Higher blood pressure, more heart disease, obesity, diabetes and artery disease, a nearly doubled rate of Crohn’s disease and tripled rates of celiac disease have all been associated with early formula feeding.
What your doctor doesn’t tell you
Pediatricians spend much time frightening parents with something like a 1 in 100,000 combined risk from vaccine-preventable diseases when parents question the utility and safety of vaccines. “Would you want to risk the life of your child?” they demand. Yet these very same professionals offer formula samples with the other hand – when the magnitude of health risks associated with the use of formula is 500 times greater.
Parenting is all about making choices and weighing risks and benefits. Many parents need to make the riskier choice of formula feeding in order to balance other factors that benefit the family. Yet some parents who have lost their children, possibly based on pediatric advice condoning or encouraging formula-feeding, would surely wish that they had been informed of the very real risks related to using formula.
This is a great summary of Dr. Linda Folden Palmer's detailed research. If you click on the title of this post you can access the full text.
I just couldn't make enough milk.......
I believe the true problem behind these remarks is the lack of support, education & commitment that you need to provide your child with the absolute best food available and I mean its FREE! Breast milk is FREE! Formula can cost you $2000 or more a year and it only provides 32 known nutrients while breast milk has over 200.
The vast majority of women produce more than enough milk. Indeed an overabundance of milk is common. Most babies that gain too slowly or lose weight do so not because the mother does not have enough milk but because the baby does not get the milk that the mother has. the usual reason that the baby does not get the milk that is available its the he is poorly latched on to the breast. That is why it is so important that the mother be shown, on the first day, how to latch the baby on properly by someone who knows what they are doing.
There are actually, very few mothers who physically are unable to make enough milk for their babies. However, as anyone who has breastfed will tell you, breastfeeding does need to be managed properly in order to maintain supply and this is where many mothers go awry and get themselves into a cycle that makes it difficult for them to produce enough milk. Enter, the above statements.
If you have a breastfeeding relationship to salvage, try seeking out an IBCLC (international board certified lactation consultant) Most supply issues are due to mismanagement and not seeking help early enough. This is not your fault. In my opinion, it is the fault of the medical profession. It should be that if you're in the hospital and your nipples are painful or cracked and bleeding, you should get to see a good lactation consultant right away. But I know at least here, that's not the case. We also unfortunately see to many nurses that go through a quick video or 2 day training and are labeled "lactation consultants" that than"misdiagnose" supply problems when it may just be a latch issue etc. Many women don't realize it's not supposed to hurt until it's already too painful to continue. I stress the importance of seeing an IBCLC as opposed to just a "lactation consultant".
A successful breastfeeding relationship must be encouraged from the beginning. Hospitals everywhere should start their baby friendly practices TODAY!
Visit babyfriendlyusa.org for more information on how to encourage the hospitals in your area to go baby friendly
If you need breastfeeding help contact http://www.iblce.org/ today and get referred to an IBCLC in your area.
Arizona residents can also visit http://www.lllofaz.org/ for more information
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Known Risks Involved When Feeding Artificial Baby Milk
- Increase in gastrointestinal illness (vomiting, diarrhea and dehydration).
- Increase in respiratory illnesses (pneumonia, asthma, and RSV).
- Increased ear infections. Otitis media is four times more prevalent in the formula fed infant (Walker 97).
- Increased likelihood of childhood obesity.
- Increased risk of tooth decay (nursing bottle carries).
- Risk of contaminated formula (either at the factory or at home). Ingestion of "allowable" amounts of insect parts, rat hairs, droppings, iron filings, and accidental excesses of chlorine and aluminum (Stuart-Macadam and Dettwyler 161).
- Severe illness resulting from improper dilution or home additives.
- Increased allergies ranging from skin rashes to asthma. (Salisbury and Blackwell 28, Lawrence and Lawrence 617-629).
- Increased risk of immune system disorders.
- a. Accelerates the development of Celiac disease.
- b. Risk factor in adult onset of Crohn's disease, Ulcerative Colitis, and Rheumatoid Arthritis.
- c. Risk factor (2-26%) in childhood onset insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (Cerrato).
- d. 5-8 fold risk of developing lymphomas in children under the age of 15.
- e. May impair effectiveness of vaccines
- f. 20 fold increase in Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC). 20% of babies who develop NEC die each year (Walker 97).
- Increased risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. [Nicole Bernshaw reports in a study of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) published in the Journal of Human Lactation (June 1991): "It is difficult to single out any particular factor responsible for the occurrence of SIDS. However, epidemiologic studies suggest strongly that the popular hypotheses have a common denominator; the lack of breastfeeding . . . Despite our current lack of understanding of the causes of SIDS, it appears that breastfeeding is perhaps one of the easiest, most loving ways to reduce a baby's vulnerability to this fatal condition (7:73-79)."]
How the Human Race Regressed............
For the women who feel breastfeeding is sexual or those against nursing in public is like saying using my lungs to breathe is wrong.
Breasts were physiologically designed to feed babies.
Why doesn't anyone get it?
The DHA/ ARA Argument & Something Else You Probaly Didn't Know
Let's take a closer look at how these fatty acids are obtained:
They are extracted from fermented algae and soil fungus with the use of a highly explosive neurotoxic petrochemical solvent, hexane. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration lists hexane as a serious hazard to worker health and safety, and the Environmental Protection Agency classifies it as a hazardous air pollutant.
oh the madness.....
DHA & ARA now found in about 90 percent of infant formulas—has made some babies quite sick: explosive diarrhea, vomiting, stomach pain and other gastrointestinal problems. Yet the formula products contain no warning labels to inform parents of the risk.
While ABM makers claim to add these oils because they “support brain and eye development,” scientific data to corroborate these claims are very weak. “Results of most of the well conducted clinical trials have not shown beneficial effects of DHA and ARA supplementation of formula milk on the physical, visual and neurodevelopmental outcomes of infants born at term,” according to Dr. Karen Simmer, professor in the School of Women’s and Infant’s Health at the University of Western Australia.
DHA and ARA supplementation adds approximately $200 annually to the cost of formula, which is absorbed by parents and publicly funded nutrition programs. Misleading claims that DHA/ARA supplemented formula is now “as close as ever to breast milk” also lead to the impression among many new mothers that formula is now equivalent to breastfeeding, which may contribute to lower rates of breastfeeding and higher formula sales.
“Adding these two fatty acids to formula does not make it ‘close to breast milk,’” said Jennifer Thomas, M.D., a pediatrician practicing in Racine, Wisconsin. “Breast milk has nutrients, live cells, and bioactive compounds that are absent from formula,” she added. “Formula advertisements featuring DHA and ARA make it a lot harder for me, as a pediatrician, to convince new mothers to breastfeed if they have seen advertisements or labels implying that formula is just as good as breast milk.”
ABM vs. Breastmilk
First to begin with what should be the obvious, ABM is not "just as good"or even "better" than breast milk. Let's see why:
To make things fair breast milk and ABM have similarities, and by that I mean they do not contain the same properties, just ones that are like each other.
ABM & Breast milk both contain: water, vitamins, fat, DHA/ARA, Carbohydrates, protein, & minerals.
Thats where the similarities end. Although we do not know every single ingredient in breast milk and may never know, scientists have been able to isolate well over 80 specific ingredients but keep in mind there are many more we may never know about. These ingredients we do know about will never be duplicated in a factory because breast milk is a living biological fluid containing numerous compounds with quite unique structures. ABM is dead genetically formulated cows milk. Now how can we expect America's infants to develop to their maximum potential if prepackaged, processed, dead, genetically formulated cows milk is what we are feeding them?
No on to the ingredients that we are aware of that breast milk has and ABM doesn't have:
Enzymes: Amylase, Lipase, Lysozyme ~ they all aid in digestion
Growth Factors: Epidermal, Human Growth Factor I, II & III ~all stimulate growth
Hormones: Thyroxin, Insulin-like growth factor, Cortisol, Prostaglandins ~these regulate metabolism & possibly protect against congenital hypothyroidism
Antibacterial Factors: Secretory IgA, IgM, IgD, IgG, Bifidodacterium, Growth Factor Z, Factor Binding proteins, Complement C1-C9, Lactoferrin, Lactoperoxidase, Lysozyme, Ganglioside, Glycoproteins, Analogues of epithelial cell preceptors, Milk cells: Macrophages, Neutrophils, B lympcytes, T lympcytes ~All protect against infection
Antiviral Factors: Secretory IgA, IgM, IgG, Non-immunoglobulin Macromolecules, Ribonucleases, Haemagglutinin inhibitors, Milk Cells: Macrophages, Neutrophils, B lympcytes, t lympcytes ~ all protect against viruses
Anti parasitic Factors: Secretory IgA ~ protects against parasites
Anti allergenic properties: Protects against allergies.
Now with all breast milk has to offer, I can't imagine why in the word there are women who CHOOSE ABM over breast milk from the start. Let's take the power back from ABM companies (who do nothing but exploit the health of our children) and let's begin to provide the most perfect FREE food for our babies from our own bodies!

