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Cross Cradle
Position for Left Breast:
- Align baby’s nose so that it
does not go past your nipple, or go to the left of your nipple, in other
words, your nipple should not be aligned with his chin
- Place your right hand under
baby’s face so your four fingers make a pillow for baby’s cheek (keep
your four fingers tightly together as if the were stuck together with
glue)
- You are now supporting the
weight of baby’s head with your hand
- You may want to sit baby’s
bottom on you arm as though it were a shelf (this will work in the
beginning with a newborn)
- Or you may want to let baby’s
bottom fall diagonally a bit and squeeze it against your rib cage with
your elbow
- Baby’s body and legs should be wrapped in
around mother.
- Pull baby’s bottom into your
body with the inside/underside of your forearm as if serving baby to you
on a platter
- This will bring him toward your
breast with the nipple pointing to the roof of his mouth
- Head supported but NOT pushed
in against your breast.
- In fact, try to think of it not
as bringing baby’s head into or near your breast at all—instead, bring
baby’s body into your body and the head will follow.
- Head should be tilted back
slightly s the nose is up and the baby’s chin is coming into the breast
while the nose never touches the breast.
- Use your whole arm to bring the
baby onto the breast, when mouth wide.
- Baby’s chin should be far away
from Baby’s chest.
WATCH LOWER LIP, aim it as far from base of nipple as possible,
so tongue draws lots of breast into mouth.
Move baby’s body
and head together – keep baby uncurled. If you keep your wrist straight,
with baby’s cheek resting on your fingers, then baby’s chin will not bend
down toward his chest
Once latched,
baby’s top lip will be close to nipple, areola shows above lip. Keep baby’s
chin close against your breast.

Need mouth
wide before baby moved onto breast. Teach baby to open wide/gape :
-
Avoid placing
baby down in a feeding position until you are completely ready to latch
baby. The longer baby waits while you get ready (undoing your breast,
etc) the more frustrated baby gets and the less open baby’s mouth will
go.
-
move baby
toward breast, touch top lip against nipple
-
move mouth
away SLIGHTLY
-
touch top lip
against nipple again, move away again
-
repeat until
baby opens wide
and has tongue forward
-
Or,
better yet, run nipple along the baby’s upper lip, from
one corner to the other, lightly, until baby opens wide


Mother’s Posture
- Sit with straight, well-supported back
- Trunk facing forwards, lap flat
Baby’s Position Before Feed Begins
-
Nipple points to the baby’s upper lip or nostril
Baby’s Body
-
Placed not quite tummy to tummy, but so that baby comes up to breast
from below and baby’s eyes make contact with mother’s
Support Breast
-
Firm inner breast tissue by raising breast slightly with fingers placed
flat on chest wall and thumb pointing up (if helpful, also use sling or
tensor bandage around breast)
Move Baby Quickly On To Breast
-
Head tilted back slightly, pushing in across shoulders so chin and lower
jaw make contact (not nose) while mouth still wide open, keep baby
uncurled (means tongue nearer breast) lower lip is aimed as far from
nipple as possible so baby’s tongue draws in maximum amount of breast
tissue
Cautions
Mother needs to AVOID
-
pushing her
breast across her body
-
chasing the
baby with her breast
-
flapping the
breast up and down
-
holding
breast with scissor grip
-
not
supporting breast
-
twisting her
body towards the baby instead of slightly away
-
aiming nipple
to centre of baby’s mouth
-
pulling
baby’s chin down to open mouth
-
flexing
baby’s head when bringing to breast
-
moving breast
into baby’s mouth instead of bringing baby to breast
-
moving baby
onto breast without a proper gape
-
not moving
baby onto breast quickly enough at height of gape
-
having baby’s
nose touch breast and not the chin
-
holding
breast away from baby’s nose (not necessary if the baby is well latched
on, as the nose will be away from the breast anyway)
See videos of
latching and latching in other positions at
www.drjacknewman.com
Questions?
Email Jack Newman at
drjacknewman@sympatico.ca,
or Edith Kernerman at
breastfeeding@sympatico.ca
or
consult: Dr. Jack Newman’s Guide to Breastfeeding
(called
The Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers
in the USA) or our DVD, Dr. Jack
Newman’s Visual Guide to Breastfeeding; or The Latch Book and Other
Keys to Breastfeeding Success; or L-eat Latch & Transfer Tool, or
the GamePlan for Protecting and Supporting Breastfeeding in the First 24
Hours of Life and Beyond. See our website at
www.drjacknewman.com.
To make an appointment email
breastfeeding@ccnm.edu
and respond to the auto reply or call 416-498-0002.
Handout
Toxins and Infant Feeding
May 2008
Written and Revised by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC 1995-2005
This
handout may be copied and distributed without further permission,
on the condition that it is not used in any context that violates
the International WHO Code on The Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes
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