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- From: xtkmg@trentu.ca (Kate Gregory)
- Subject: Re: Breast Pumping Question
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.155630.26288@trentu.ca>
- Organization: Trent University, Ontario
- References: <1993Jan23.031150.24373@oakhill.sps.mot.com>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 15:56:30 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
- In article <1993Jan23.031150.24373@oakhill.sps.mot.com> amym@oakhill.sps.mot.com (Amy Moseley Rupp) writes:
- >
- >My question is: what stimulates milk production the most, frequency,
- >total number of minutes a day, continuous stimulation, etc? Is there
- >a difference between pumping, say, 4x/day every 6 hours, 6x/day every
- >4 hours, or 4x/day every 4 hours, with a break at night, assuming
- >the total number of minutes stays the same?
-
- Look at it this way -- if you pumped only once a day, even if it was
- for six times as long as usual, there's no way you'd get, say, 24
- ounces, right? So frequency is good. Don't pump by time though. Pump
- until the flow has basically stopped. If it doesn't hurt you could do
- a minute or so of "dry" pumping after the flow has stopped in the
- hopes that the extra stimulation would increase supply, but don't do
- that if it hurts.
-
- Also, take your cues from the child you are planning to eventually
- feed directly: pump as many times a day as your child feeds. If your
- child wakes in the night, you should pump in the night. I know how
- horrible that is. I know all about a teary middle of the night feed,
- alone in the dark and the baby isn't just peacefully nursing like
- things are supposed to be, instead there's all this paraphenalia or
- fuss with positions or whatnot, and the baby cries and you do too and
- then when you finally get finished with that and the baby is asleep
- again the last thing you want to do is go and pump but you have to.
- I did that for months. It is horrible.
-
- But look, anecdotal evidence time. I pumped every time Beth fed (and
- for weeks she got only pumped milk, nothing direct from me) and
- eventually she became a fully breastfed baby. An acquaintance who had
- her child a week later and had exactly the same refusal to latch
- problems pumped only during the day, and gave formula to make up
- for the skipped pumpings, and within weeks had a fully formula fed
- baby and decided not to bother retraining his suck. It takes motivation
- and persistence to overcome a combined suck/supply problem, and IMO
- it takes pumping in the middle of the night. I wish it didn't, for
- your sake and for mine, but I'm not doing anyone any favours by
- saying "don't bother pumping in the night". Bother, OK?
-
- Kate
-
-
-