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Breast Feeding Help -
What
to Feed the Baby When the Mother is Working Outside the Home
This is
not an information sheet on all the ins and outs of working outside the
home and breastfeeding. This sheet provides information on how your baby can
be fed when you are not with him. It is addressed in particular to the
mother who is returning to paid work when the baby is about 6 months of age.
Mothers in Canada have the right to 52 weeks maternity leave. You should
take full advantage of this time if it is at all possible. Remember that
there are costs to returning to outside work (transportation, clothes, day
care) that may cancel any benefit of increased income. If you cannot take a
full year, take at least 6 months, better 7 months (from the point of view
of ease of continuing breastfeeding while away from your baby). Your baby
will never be this age again.
Some Myths:
1. Babies
must learn to take a bottle so that they can be fed when the mother is
not there.
Not true.
Why not a cup? It is true that some exclusively breastfed babies will
not take a bottle by 2 or 3 months of age. Most, who have not taken a
bottle, and even some who did accept a bottle in the first weeks of life
will not take one by the time they are 4 or 5 months of age. This is
no tragedy, and there is no reason to give a bottle early so that
the baby knows how. If your baby is refusing to take a bottle, do not
try to force him; you and he may become very frustrated and there is
just no need to go through all this. If the baby is at least
6 months of age when you start back at outside work, the baby quite
simply does not need to take a bottle. If he is even 3 or 4
months, he does not need to take a bottle. He can be fed liquids or
solids off a spoon and by 6 months of age he can be taking enough so
that he will not be hungry during the day. Furthermore, he can start
learning to drink from a cup even by 1 day of age. The cup can be an
open cup and is best not to have a spout (a “sippy” cup is, essentially,
a bottle). If, however, he has not got the hang of the cup by the time
you must leave him, do not worry, he can take fluids off a spoon, or the
solid foods can be mixed with more liquid (expressed milk, water).
Obviously, if the baby is to be taking a fair amount of a variety of
foods by 6 months of age, he may need to be started on solids by 5
months of age. However, some babies prefer to wait for the mother in
order to drink something. This is fine; many babies sleep 12 hours at
night without drinking or eating at all.
2. But
getting the baby to take a bottle surely won’t hurt.
Not
necessarily true.
Some babies do fine with both. The occasional bottle, when breastfeeding
is going well, may not hurt. But if the baby is getting several bottles
a day on a regular basis, and, in addition, your milk supply decreases
because the baby is breastfeeding less, it is quite possible that the
baby will start refusing the breast, even if he is older than 6 months
of age.
3. Babies
need to drink milk when the mother is not at home.
Not true.
Three or four good breastfeedings during a 24-hour period plus a variety
of solid foods gives the baby all he needs nutritionally, and thus he
does not need any other type of milk when you are at your outside
job. Of course, solid foods can be mixed with expressed milk or other
milk, but this is not necessary.
4. If the baby is to get milk other than breastmilk, it
needs to be artificial baby milk (infant formula) until the baby is at
least 9 months of age.
Not true.
If the baby is breastfeeding a few times a day and getting fair
quantities of a variety of solid foods, infant formula is neither
necessary nor desirable. Indeed, babies who have not had infant formula
before 5 or 6 months of age often refuse to drink it because it tastes
pretty bad. (If you want to convince yourself of how little we know
about breastmilk, ask yourself why it is that, although breastmilk and
infant formulas have the same amount of sugar, breastmilk is so much
sweeter). If you want to give the baby some other sort of milk,
homogenized milk is acceptable at 6 months of age, as long as it is not
the baby’s only food. In fact, if the baby is taking good quantities of
a wide variety of foods, breastfeeding 3 or 4 times a day, and growing
well, homogenized milk or 2% milk is good enough, but also not
necessary. The “need” for formula to 9 months to 12 months of age
is basically formula company marketing and very successful at that.
Statements by the Canadian Paediatric Society and the American Academy
of Pediatrics urging formula to a year surely did not take into
consideration the baby who is continuing to breastfeed after 6 months.
5. Babies
need to drink milk to get calcium.
Not true.
If you are worried about the baby’s intake of calcium, he can eat cheese
or yogurt. There is no need to drink the calcium. Besides, if
the baby is also breastfeeding, breastmilk still contains calcium.
6. Follow-up formulas (artificial milk for infants over 6
months of age) are specially adapted to the needs of infants 6 to 12
months of age.
Not true.
They are completely unnecessary and are specially adapted to the needs
of the formula companies’ profit margins. They also are part of a
marketing strategy that tries to get around restrictions on the
advertising of artificial baby milks directly to the public (widely
disregarded in any case). In Europe now, there are special formulas
available for the toddler (1-3 years of age). Some people will buy
anything, it seems. But these toddler formulas will soon be here. You
can bet on it. Bottom line über alles. We will all soon be on
formula from birth to death. In Singapore, I have seen formula labelled
“from 3 to 7 years”.
7. The
breastfed baby 4 months of age needs to be getting more iron than can be
provided by breastmilk alone.
Not true.
For the baby born at term who is breastfeeding exclusively, all the iron
required is provided by breastmilk. However, by 6 months of age, more or
less, it is prudent for the baby to begin getting more iron than
that provided by breastmilk alone. The best way for your baby to get
iron is through his food, and the best source of iron is meat, not
formula, and not infant cereals.
8. The best way to assure the baby’s getting enough iron
is to give him infant cereals.
Not true.
Infant cereals do contain a lot of iron, but most of it is not absorbed, and
this amount of iron seems to cause constipation in some babies. Furthermore,
some breastfed babies who have had only breastmilk to 5 or 6 months of age
do not like cereal. There is nothing wrong with infant cereal, but pushing
this food on reluctant babies may result in later feeding problems. The best
way to ensure the baby is getting enough iron is to continue breastfeeding,
and introduce solid foods in a relaxed, enjoyable way at the appropriate
time (See handout Starting Solid Foods). The appropriate time is when
the baby is showing interest in eating by reaching out for and trying to eat
food the parents or other members of the family are eating. This occurs
usually about 4 ½ to 5 ½ months of age. A baby this age can eat what the
parents eat, with few exceptions. There is no need to be obsessive about the
order in which foods are introduced, or trying to keep the baby eating only
one food/week. The easiest way to give extra iron for the 6 to 12 month old
baby is meat, the iron of which is very well absorbed. Start feeding the
baby solids in a way that makes eating enjoyable and the baby will eat
iron-containing foods just fine.
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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