Question:
Hi – Here’s a sequence you can attempt: First, measure exactly how much milk/formula your baby is taking every day by bottle. After you’ve done this for a few days, so you have a sense of how much your baby is actually taking by bottle, start offering bottle first, then breast (with SNS or equivalent) right after. That is, the bottle quenches the fiercest hunger pains, and then the breast is right there. If you can get to your baby BEFORE she’s hungry, then offer the breast first. Every suckle she takes from the breast is good. Now, your goal is to decrease the amount by bottle and increase the amount by breast. You can either wait for a growth spurt, when she’s hungry far more often, and NOT increase the ounces by bottle, or else you can decrease the amount by bottle by 1 ounce every 3 days. (You should do that eventually, anyway.) You may also wish to use a nipple shield. It makes the breast "feel" more bottle-like for some babies, and although it’s a nuisance and you’ll eventually want to get rid of it, it may help with the transition. Do keep a close watch on the wet and poopy diapers. Getting nutrition of any sort is far more important than getting breastmilk in particular. You may or may not succeed in getting your baby back to the breast. If you do not succeed, don’t fret too much. You still have a beautiful baby, and this little setback will get you used to her piered eybrow when she’s a teenager. Best of luck, –Beth Kevles http://web.mit.edu/kevles/www/nomilk.html — a page for the milk-allergic Disclaimer: Nothing in this message should be construed as medical advice. Please consult with your own medical practicioner.
Response:
Just a little note to Richard and Lily. I’ve been watching your struggle and Richard you have no idea how much your support and encouragement, not to mention the time in the trenches feeding your precious baby, can mean to a struggling new mother. My DD’s father (another Richard, who is over 50 too) made the comment, "well, I guess she is just going to be a bottle baby." He said this while I was in bed trying to get my squirming, crying baby to my full, painful breast. We have moved beyond that now, but at the time I wailed and wailed feeling devastated and an absolute failure. You are a shining example of what love and commitment mean. Glad to hear Lily’s supply is overflowing. You wouldn’t believe how fast that stockpile in the freezer can disappear!
Sending calming vibes your way ~~~~~~ Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Just a hint about the Avent bottles that drip. I too was frustrated with them in the childcare center I worked. The trick is to tighten the until they make ‘pop’ sound and then loosen about an 1/8 – 1/4 turn. For some strange reason this will seal the bottle and prevent leaking. Becky
I went through something similar with my first. After the birth, I had hemorraging, and lost quite a bit of blood. My son was born two weeks early, and was very sleepy. We ended up going the same route with him as this one, but he never ever latched on. And, with the pump we rented from the hospital, I never gave out more than 2 oz of milk at a time. We tried the finger feeding method, but then he wouldn’t take the breast (or a bottle either). We tried the SNS system, but he was already rejecting breasts by then. We tried the Avent bottles, but the ones we got dripped if turned upside down, so that was counter-productive. The Vent-air bottles with the stage 1 nipple are very slow flow, but the shape is the normal bottle nipple shape. (And, by the time we noticed that with the first baby, he was on bottles full time.) I felt the same way you did, but I couldn’t keep up with it for that long. Between my fatigue from anemia, and my emotional state after my son rejecting my breasts, I decided to go with bottle feeding after two weeks of fighting. He did just fine with it, but I really did want to breast feed him, so it was always a source of disappointment. I wish you the best of luck. I am going to be trying Marvel’s suggesting of just using a syringe after the breast starting tomorrow. I do have a Medela Classic now. It is a very nice pump, and my production is doing well. I just need to slip in extra pumpings to boost production to store. Jackie
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Jackie, we are in a very similar situation. Our baby is 3w+2d today. After a wonderful vaginal birth (zero med) which greatly exceeded our expectations, she was readmitted at 3 days for elevated bilirubin (at 14.7 mg/dL, not really elevated, we later learned) and excessive weight loss. She had eaten nothing since birth; her discharge weight, at age 60 hours, was 12% below her birth weight — a loss of over a pound (454g). In the hospital, against my wishes (unfortunately, I didn’t give a direct order), she was given formula by bottle. We have been pumping, feeding her only breast milk. We rented a Medela Classic, and found that using it has increased my wife, Lily’s milk production significantly. We’re stockpiling breast milk in our freezer (in fact, on today’s To-Do list is the purchase of additional storage bags). If you use a hospital-grade pump (Medela Classic or Medela Lactina, for example), your production will increase. Mid-grade pumps (Medela Pump In Style) will keep your production from falling, but won’t increase it much. [Disclaimer: I have nothing to gain by your using Medela pumps; I mention them only because they are the only ones familiar to me.] Two of our lacation consultants (we’ve seen SIX!) recommended using the Avent bottle/nipple, because of the dome base, which will keep her jaw open and lips flared. We have used an SNS and a Hazelbaker finger feeder. This poor child has had every type of feeding apparatus imagineable in her mouth. Feeding is a time of frustration and tears for us. We feed her a little, because if she is too hungry, she only cries at the breast, then have her try at the breast. She cries and squirms, Lily struggles to keep her resolve, and I offer encouragement, feel frustrated at my inability to offer any real help, and simply hope for the best. These past couple of weeks have been hell. I’m sorry, but clearly, I’m in no position to offer you advice. I offer you my encouragement and very best wishes. Richard : I have a ten day old girl who was a sleepy baby. Of course, the hospital : had us supplement her with formula there, and the lactation consultant : reccomended that we try her at each breast 15 minutes and then move on to : the bottle at each feeding. : She only latched on maybe five times total, and then she started rejecting : the breast entirely. She would fight being pushed into it, and cry harder. : I didn’t want to get her totally turned off to the breasts, so I backed off : for a while, and posted my problems to the La Leche Leauge. However, in the : five or six days since my question, I have not had any answers, and she is : getting more and more fixed on the plastic nipple. : Right now I am pumping 95% of the milk she drinks, but this is not going to : last. Eventually, her appetite will outpace my production. : Help! : Jackie
Response:
After reading Richard and Lily’s story I think my DD’s mouth was too small also.
I had this problem, too. With all three of my babies. My last one, while a good nurser, just couldn’t get on far enough for a good seal so was taking in as much air as milk! YIKES! Has anyone checked for a short frenulin? I always checked this when someone said the baby’s mouth was too small. My second had this problem – his tongue just couldn’t come over his lower gum – and it wasn’t discovered until three weeks of cracked bleeding nipples and fighting him to nurse! Whew! once we had it snipped, the relief on my nipples was phenomenal! Take care and good luck. Darla Homeschooling Mom to Freya, Alec, and Kelson! Wife to Jim.
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Oh my goodness Darla! Nobody suggested it to me at the time, but if I have another child, you can bet I’m getting second and third and FOURTH opinions about that possibility!
Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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GREAT NEWS!!! I’m so glad to hear it. Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Richard and Lily, Micaela is a lucky girl to have parents like you two! Glad to hear that she is gaining well and you have optimism for her latching on properly. Sounds like that could be anytime within the next week! Crossing fingers, Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Thanks so much, Marvel! Hearing words like yours really helps us keep going! The next week would be WONDERFUL!! Richard and Lily
: Richard and Lily, : : Micaela is a lucky girl to have parents like you two! Glad to hear that she : is gaining well and you have optimism for her latching on properly. Sounds : like that could be anytime within the next week! : : Crossing fingers, : Marvel : Join my breastfeeding group! : http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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I want to add, too, Marvel, that I’m truly sorry you had such a rough time with your DD. I can truly sympathize with you. We have a friend whose mother scolded her (!) for not having milk at day 3 (you’d think she’d remember herself!), and whose husband screamed at her, "What are you trying to do, starve my daughter?" No woman should ever feel a failure because of a breastfeeding problem, unless she is able to breastfeed and chooses to formula feed for "convenience". Then she has every right to consider herself a failure. Anyay, I’m not good, others are bad. : Sending calming vibes your way ~~~~~~ Thanks so much. They feel good!! And we can really use them! Richard
: Just a little note to Richard and Lily. : : I’ve been watching your struggle and Richard you have no idea how much your : support and encouragement, not to mention the time in the trenches feeding : your precious baby, can mean to a struggling new mother. : : My DD’s father (another Richard, who is over 50 too) made the comment, : "well, I guess she is just going to be a bottle baby." He said this while : I was in bed trying to get my squirming, crying baby to my full, painful : breast. We have moved beyond that now, but at the time I wailed and wailed : feeling devastated and an absolute failure. : : You are a shining example of what love and commitment mean. Glad to hear : Lily’s supply is overflowing. You wouldn’t believe how fast that stockpile in : the freezer can disappear!
: : Sending calming vibes your way ~~~~~~ : Marvel : Join my breastfeeding group! : http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Thank you, oh so much, Marvel. You can’t know how much words like yours mean at a time like this. We are so totally absorbed in trying to give Miceala what is best for her, it’s easy to lose perspective. We look from feeding to feeding, wishing we could give her a more pleasant experience at meal time. We think she started her three-week growth spurt this morning (she’s 3w+3d today). She just kept chugging and chugging — ended up taking over 4 oz, a new high. With luck, some of that nutrition will end up growing her jaw and mouth a bit larger so she won’t have such a hard time latching. Last night I read about some babies who spontaneously started latching perfectly at age 5 weeks and 6 weeks, and one at 3 months (!! can we hold on that long??), so we still are hoping she’ll get the hang of it once she is a bit bigger. At least she is doing well, albeit on bottles (Avent). She is feeding on 100% breast milk and is putting on weight rapidly. We’re trying to be optimistic. Your kind thoughts help, and we truly appreciate your gracious words. Richard and Lily
: Just a little note to Richard and Lily. : I’ve been watching your struggle and Richard you have no idea how much your : support and encouragement, not to mention the time in the trenches feeding your : precious baby, can mean to a struggling new mother. : My DD’s father (another Richard, who is over 50 too) made the comment, "well, I : guess she is just going to be a bottle baby." He said this while I was in bed : trying to get my squirming, crying baby to my full, painful breast. We have : moved beyond that now, but at the time I wailed and wailed feeling devastated : and an absolute failure. : You are a shining example of what love and commitment mean. Glad to hear Lily’s : supply is overflowing. You wouldn’t believe how fast that stockpile in the : freezer can disappear!
: Sending calming vibes your way ~~~~~~ : Marvel : Join my breastfeeding group! : http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
Response:
I have a ten day old girl who was a sleepy baby. Of course, the hospital had us supplement her with formula there, and the lactation consultant reccomended that we try her at each breast 15 minutes and then move on to the bottle at each feeding. She only latched on maybe five times total, and then she started rejecting the breast entirely. She would fight being pushed into it, and cry harder. I didn’t want to get her totally turned off to the breasts, so I backed off for a while, and posted my problems to the La Leche Leauge. However, in the five or six days since my question, I have not had any answers, and she is getting more and more fixed on the plastic nipple. Right now I am pumping 95% of the milk she drinks, but this is not going to last. Eventually, her appetite will outpace my production. Help! Jackie
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You’re right. After that last post, she’s been feeding three out of four times on the breast! Some of her problem was that she wasn’t latching on properly, and was getting frustrated. Now, she’s getting it right most of the time. When she doesn’t breast feed, even after I feed her 2 oz. of EBM, she’s still fussing like she’s not satisfied. So, it is a reinforcement to both of us to get her to breast feed. She is feeding only on my left breast right now. Which is strange, because my right one produces twice as much milk. I’ll let her get good at latching on before I move her over. Like you said, at least she’s nursing. My left one does produce enough milk for her by itself. I’m just taking the opportunity to stockpile the stuff from the right. Sounds like you had an amazing fight. I wish I had found these forums twenty months ago when I was going through a similar fight with my son. It would have done me a world of good to hear people to be successful after the baby being bottle fed for so long. I will post as things progress. She’s fooled me before, and might backslide. Jackie
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Yes, Jackie I did, but it got progressively better day by day. From entirely eating EBM/formula to only EBM to one nursing session to two nursing sessions and so on. My DD didn’t have a poor suck, she had a fierce one! YIKES! After reading Richard and Lily’s story I think my DD’s mouth was too small also. My pain and her poor latch. We came home from the hospital on day 4 of her life and my nipples were cracked and bleeding, then my milk didn’t come in until like day 6. The second week of her life I mostly fed her by bottle (fomula and EBM). I was given breast shields to use but she took the bare breast better than the shielded nipple, so I just gave myself more time to heal while I pumped. [Your daughter might take to the shield.] I made matters worse because I did use the bottle as a crutch. But you know how much you worry that you are starving your child and she could really suck a bottle down! I used the Avent too. Then after my nipples healed I felt more confident offering her the breast before or after every feeding and taking the advice given by NOT giving her the bottle. Finally, little by little she would eat at the left breast but flat refuse the right. So, my LLL friend said to go with the favored breast (at least she was nursing). By that point (around week 3) I was offering the left breast whenever she was hungry and pumping the right. If she was fussy at the left breast or so hungry she fought me, I gave her the EBM from the syringe. It just took until she was 2 months old before we "clicked" and didn’t need to supplement. By then she was even nursing from the right breast. (Now the right is her favorite one…LOL.) Try the suggestions Beth gave. Give her the EBM first to help calm her and get nutrition into her. Even if your breast is just a pacifier at first, it’s a beginning. If she is still giving you wet and poopy diapers? (at least 6 wet ones per day) then she is getting enough bm/food. You cannot judge just by how many ounces she eats at any one feeding. Has she been weighed lately? Gaining weight? Has her color gotten better? Does she eat 8-10 times within a 24 hour period? You can stimulate her if she falls asleep after only a few sips/sucks by feeding her dressed only in a diaper or baring and tickling her feet. Would it be possible to stay in bed bare chested and the baby naked but with a diaper for a few days? One day? Skin-to-skin contact encourages them toward the breast. Also, you can use the pump to get your letdown going before you offer the breast. Then she won’t have to work so hard. And if she slows down or falls asleep, switch to the other breast, then back again if need be. My LLL friend said that sometimes with newborns the switching every few minutes seems to stimulate them. Sorry, I don’t know anything about the SNS. You could try your local LLL, a postpartum doula or LC. You’re doing great….really! Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Hello all, Just a couple of things I haven’t seen in this thread. 1. _Always_ offer the breast before she is to the crying stage. Once they are crying they are so hungry, nothing but immediate gratification will console her. As soon as she begins rooting is the time. I wholeheartedly agree with co-sleeping. It does not have to be "all or nothing" as some people seem to think. Once breastfeeding is well established she can be moved to a bassinet next to your bed and as she grows, to her own room if that is your desire. 2. Skin to skin contact!!! Have Mom go without a shirt as much as possible and babe in just a diaper. If you must crank up the heat to 80 degrees, do it! Babies are extremely tactile and pretty much sense everything through their skin. Use a sling-type baby carrier that will expose as much skin as possible and have Mom carry baby around. Again, as soon as babe roots or makes other signs, try breastfeeding. Baby may actually nurse more frequently because she can smell the breastmilk and will realize that food is closeby! Best of luck! Darla Homeschooling Mom to Freya, Alec, and Kelson! Wife to Jim.
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Yes, Jackie I did, but it got progressively better day by day. From entirely eating EBM/formula to only EBM to one nursing session to two nursing sessions and so on. My DD didn’t have a poor suck, she had a fierce one! YIKES! After reading Richard and Lily’s story I think my DD’s mouth was too small also. My pain and her poor latch. We came home from the hospital on day 4 of her life and my nipples were cracked and bleeding, then my milk didn’t come in until like day 6. The second week of her life I mostly fed her by bottle (fomula and EBM). I was given breast shields to use but she took the bare breast better than the shielded nipple, so I just gave myself more time to heal while I pumped. [Your daughter might take to the shield.] I made matters worse because I did use the bottle as a crutch. But you know how much you worry that you are starving your child and she could really suck a bottle down! I used the Avent too. Then after my nipples healed I felt more confident offering her the breast before or after every feeding and taking the advice given by NOT giving her the bottle. Finally, little by little she would eat at the left breast but flat refuse the right. So, my LLL friend said to go with the favored breast (at least she was nursing). By that point (around week 3) I was offering the left breast whenever she was hungry and pumping the right. If she was fussy at the left breast or so hungry she fought me, I gave her the EBM from the syringe. It just took until she was 2 months old before we "clicked" and didn’t need to supplement. By then she was even nursing from the right breast. (Now the right is her favorite one…LOL.) Try the suggestions Beth gave. Give her the EBM first to help calm her and get nutrition into her. Even if your breast is just a pacifier at first, it’s a beginning. If she is still giving you wet and poopy diapers? (at least 6 wet ones per day) then she is getting enough bm/food. You cannot judge just by how many ounces she eats at any one feeding. Has she been weighed lately? Gaining weight? Has her color gotten better? Does she eat 8-10 times within a 24 hour period? You can stimulate her if she falls asleep after only a few sips/sucks by feeding her dressed only in a diaper or baring and tickling her feet. Would it be possible to stay in bed bare chested and the baby naked but with a diaper for a few days? One day? Skin-to-skin contact encourages them toward the breast. Also, you can use the pump to get your letdown going before you offer the breast. Then she won’t have to work so hard. And if she slows down or falls asleep, switch to the other breast, then back again if need be. My LLL friend said that sometimes with newborns the switching every few minutes seems to stimulate them. Sorry, I don’t know anything about the SNS. You could try your local LLL, a postpartum doula or LC. You’re doing great….really! Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Well, day one is progressing very slowly. She is only taking a couple of swigs at the breast before getting mad, or she falls asleep. She slept for three hours this morning after only eating 1.5 oz, which is less than her regular feeding of 2 oz. I have spent the last four hours fighting to get 4 oz into her. Finally, she started waking up, but still wasn’t really nursing. You did this for two months? I feel I am doing something wrong right now. She is letting milk dribble out of her mouth, both from the breast and from the syringe. But, she is not eating what she normally does. How long should I keep her on the breast before going to the syringe? I don’t want to starve the child. Also, does anyone know where to get a Supplimental Nursing System? I have tried the hospital, but they were useless. Jackie
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Hi Jackie, Sorry to hear that you are having nipple confusion so early. I have been in your shoes and it seems a lifetime ago when in reality it was a short 8 months. (My daughter was born by c-section 3/13/02). The first thing that you HAVE to do and it is the hardest, is to NOT give her the bottle. You can feed her with a cup (small paper dixie cup) that can be squeezed to feed her. Or use a syringe (my tool of choice) or a finger feeder. Use your expressed milk and keep pumping to maintain your supply. Keep offering the breast at each feeding. She will want the source because is frustrating to eat by the other methods. Please try not get discouraged, things can still be turned around. It took me until DD was 2 months old before she was entirely back on the breast. But it has been a breeze and such a joy ever since. I have a bfg group on yahoo with LLL members, regular moms and doula’s who are all there to help. (I’m one of the regular moms <g) Sending you support vibes, Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Well, in the first place, alt.support.breastfeeding is not that heavily read. You would be better off posting this request to misc.kids.breastfeeding, which has a lot more traffic.
: I have a ten day old girl who was a sleepy baby. Of course, the hospital : had us supplement her with formula there, and the lactation consultant : reccomended that we try her at each breast 15 minutes and then move on to : the bottle at each feeding. Well that is three mistakes that the medical advice you got compounded. 1. supplement so quickly and early. 2. Limit nursing time before supplementing 3. Using a bottle for what supplementation is necessary. : She only latched on maybe five times total, and then she started rejecting : the breast entirely. She would fight being pushed into it, and cry harder. : I didn’t want to get her totally turned off to the breasts, so I backed off : for a while, and posted my problems to the La Leche Leauge. However, in the : five or six days since my question, I have not had any answers, and she is : getting more and more fixed on the plastic nipple. Your daughter has a serious case of nipple confusion which had led to bottle preference. IMO, the first thing you are going to have to do to get her back on the breast is to get her OFF the bottle, and it is not going to be easy! The first thing you are going to have to do is to get her off the bottle. I suggest that you replace it with an SNS (supplementary nursing system) or LA (Lact Aid). Both of these are supplementation devices which forces the baby to nurse as if it is on the breast to receive the supplement, whether it is EBM or formula. Your daughter is not going to like it! She is going to cry, she is going to complain, and initially she is going to refuse to use it. But stay with it and don’t give her the bottle. She will NOT starve herself, and if you are persistent, you can get her onto the SNA or LA as a replacement for the bottle. This the first step. Second is to get her to active nurse at the breast as much as possible. This is often easiest to do when she is very sleepy, as with the first nursing in the morning, the bedtime nursing, or in the middle of the night. If you are not already co-sleeping with your daughter, I suggest that you do so, and that you simply try to latch her on immediately when she wakes to nurse in the middle of the night. I would also suggest that when you succeed in getting her to latch on and nurse that you let her nurse as long as she wants to, even it it is 45 minutes or an hour or longer. Finally, I would suggest that you find an ICBLC certified laction consultant. Not all LCs are created equal, and often the ones used in hospitals do not have enough training to successfully treast some breastfeeding problems. : Help! : Jackie Good luck, Larry
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Hi Jackie, Sorry to hear that you are having nipple confusion so early. I have been in your shoes and it seems a lifetime ago when in reality it was a short 8 months. (My daughter was born by c-section 3/13/02). The first thing that you HAVE to do and it is the hardest, is to NOT give her the bottle. You can feed her with a cup (small paper dixie cup) that can be squeezed to feed her. Or use a syringe (my tool of choice) or a finger feeder. Use your expressed milk and keep pumping to maintain your supply. Keep offering the breast at each feeding. She will want the source because is frustrating to eat by the other methods. Please try not get discouraged, things can still be turned around. It took me until DD was 2 months old before she was entirely back on the breast. But it has been a breeze and such a joy ever since. I have a bfg group on yahoo with LLL members, regular moms and doula’s who are all there to help. (I’m one of the regular moms <g) Sending you support vibes, Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Jackie, After a bit of research in my bookmarks, I found Dr. Newman’s website (he is considered the KING of bf!). Below is a link to some notes about a baby girl not latching on. Check out the other stuff on the site, there may be more information you can use there. http://www.bflrc.com/newman/overheads/Not%20Latching%20On-nurse.htm Hang in there and keep pumping! Marvel Join my breastfeeding group! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BiCC
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Jackie, we are in a very similar situation. Our baby is 3w+2d today. After a wonderful vaginal birth (zero med) which greatly exceeded our expectations, she was readmitted at 3 days for elevated bilirubin (at 14.7 mg/dL, not really elevated, we later learned) and excessive weight loss. She had eaten nothing since birth; her discharge weight, at age 60 hours, was 12% below her birth weight — a loss of over a pound (454g). In the hospital, against my wishes (unfortunately, I didn’t give a direct order), she was given formula by bottle. We have been pumping, feeding her only breast milk. We rented a Medela Classic, and found that using it has increased my wife, Lily’s milk production significantly. We’re stockpiling breast milk in our freezer (in fact, on today’s To-Do list is the purchase of additional storage bags). If you use a hospital-grade pump (Medela Classic or Medela Lactina, for example), your production will increase. Mid-grade pumps (Medela Pump In Style) will keep your production from falling, but won’t increase it much. [Disclaimer: I have nothing to gain by your using Medela pumps; I mention them only because they are the only ones familiar to me.] Two of our lacation consultants (we’ve seen SIX!) recommended using the Avent bottle/nipple, because of the dome base, which will keep her jaw open and lips flared. We have used an SNS and a Hazelbaker finger feeder. This poor child has had every type of feeding apparatus imagineable in her mouth. Feeding is a time of frustration and tears for us. We feed her a little, because if she is too hungry, she only cries at the breast, then have her try at the breast. She cries and squirms, Lily struggles to keep her resolve, and I offer encouragement, feel frustrated at my inability to offer any real help, and simply hope for the best. These past couple of weeks have been hell. I’m sorry, but clearly, I’m in no position to offer you advice. I offer you my encouragement and very best wishes. Richard
: I have a ten day old girl who was a sleepy baby. Of course, the hospital : had us supplement her with formula there, and the lactation consultant : reccomended that we try her at each breast 15 minutes and then move on to : the bottle at each feeding. : She only latched on maybe five times total, and then she started rejecting : the breast entirely. She would fight being pushed into it, and cry harder. : I didn’t want to get her totally turned off to the breasts, so I backed off : for a while, and posted my problems to the La Leche Leauge. However, in the : five or six days since my question, I have not had any answers, and she is : getting more and more fixed on the plastic nipple. : Right now I am pumping 95% of the milk she drinks, but this is not going to : last. Eventually, her appetite will outpace my production. : Help! : Jackie
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I went through something similar with my first. After the birth, I had hemorraging, and lost quite a bit of blood. My son was born two weeks early, and was very sleepy. We ended up going the same route with him as this one, but he never ever latched on. And, with the pump we rented from the hospital, I never gave out more than 2 oz of milk at a time. We tried the finger feeding method, but then he wouldn’t take the breast (or a bottle either). We tried the SNS system, but he was already rejecting breasts by then. We tried the Avent bottles, but the ones we got dripped if turned upside down, so that was counter-productive. The Vent-air bottles with the stage 1 nipple are very slow flow, but the shape is the normal bottle nipple shape. (And, by the time we noticed that with the first baby, he was on bottles full time.) I felt the same way you did, but I couldn’t keep up with it for that long. Between my fatigue from anemia, and my emotional state after my son rejecting my breasts, I decided to go with bottle feeding after two weeks of fighting. He did just fine with it, but I really did want to breast feed him, so it was always a source of disappointment. I wish you the best of luck. I am going to be trying Marvel’s suggesting of just using a syringe after the breast starting tomorrow. I do have a Medela Classic now. It is a very nice pump, and my production is doing well. I just need to slip in extra pumpings to boost production to store. Jackie
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Jackie, we are in a very similar situation. Our baby is 3w+2d today. After a wonderful vaginal birth (zero med) which greatly exceeded our expectations, she was readmitted at 3 days for elevated bilirubin (at 14.7 mg/dL, not really elevated, we later learned) and excessive weight loss. She had eaten nothing since birth; her discharge weight, at age 60 hours, was 12% below her birth weight — a loss of over a pound (454g). In the hospital, against my wishes (unfortunately, I didn’t give a direct order), she was given formula by bottle. We have been pumping, feeding her only breast milk. We rented a Medela Classic, and found that using it has increased my wife, Lily’s milk production significantly. We’re stockpiling breast milk in our freezer (in fact, on today’s To-Do list is the purchase of additional storage bags). If you use a hospital-grade pump (Medela Classic or Medela Lactina, for example), your production will increase. Mid-grade pumps (Medela Pump In Style) will keep your production from falling, but won’t increase it much. [Disclaimer: I have nothing to gain by your using Medela pumps; I mention them only because they are the only ones familiar to me.] Two of our lacation consultants (we’ve seen SIX!) recommended using the Avent bottle/nipple, because of the dome base, which will keep her jaw open and lips flared. We have used an SNS and a Hazelbaker finger feeder. This poor child has had every type of feeding apparatus imagineable in her mouth. Feeding is a time of frustration and tears for us. We feed her a little, because if she is too hungry, she only cries at the breast, then have her try at the breast. She cries and squirms, Lily struggles to keep her resolve, and I offer encouragement, feel frustrated at my inability to offer any real help, and simply hope for the best. These past couple of weeks have been hell. I’m sorry, but clearly, I’m in no position to offer you advice. I offer you my encouragement and very best wishes. Richard : I have a ten day old girl who was a sleepy baby. Of course, the hospital : had us supplement her with formula there, and the lactation consultant : reccomended that we try her at each breast 15 minutes and then move on to : the bottle at each feeding. : She only latched on maybe five times total, and then she started rejecting : the breast entirely. She would fight being pushed into it, and cry harder. : I didn’t want to get her totally turned off to the breasts, so I backed off : for a while, and posted my problems to the La Leche Leauge. However, in the : five or six days since my question, I have not had any answers, and she is : getting more and more fixed on the plastic nipple. : Right now I am pumping 95% of the milk she drinks, but this is not going to : last. Eventually, her appetite will outpace my production. : Help! : Jackie
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