Me and my girls

Me and my girls

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Toronto Hospitals push for breastfeeding

I am all for breastfeeding. I breastfed both my girls for at least 10 months of each of their lives. I am happy that I was able to have successful breastfeeding relationships with both of them. However, they were not easy to establish.

I have been reading the recent articles about the push in Toronto hospitals for breastfeeding as statistics say that most new moms are not breastfeeding their babies exclusively 6 months after their child's birth. While I think that breastfeeding should be encouraged in the hospital and that breastfeeding clinics are wonderful if they are able to provide support to moms; what I find objectionable is the militant approach suggested by some doctors to stop providing formula in the hospital.

I truly believe that if formula had not been available to me with my daughters, instead of a successful breastfeeding relationship, I would have given up and not had one at all. I had a c-section with Ainsley after 12 hours of labour and pushing and oodles of drugs. My milk did not come in for 4 days. Ainsley was a hungry baby and started losing weight. She had lost 10% of her weight before the hospital finally suggested I supplement with formula.

I had never considered formula at all and took it for granted that I would breastfeed. However, my daughter was hungry, losing weight and I felt like a failure. The supplementation with formula bought my body the time to catch up and produce milk. I found the whole breastfeeding process up to this point very stressful and to be able to feed my child and satisfy her hunger with formula enabled me to relax and take the time to learn to breastfeed properly.

I feel uncomfortable with nurses and doctors taking formula out of the equation all together as it is sometimes necessary. It can be helpful and ultimately, the health of your baby is most important. Ironically, after the initial 2 weeks of formula Ainsley drank, she refused to drink formula after that and we exclusively breast fed until we started solids. With Juliet, I gave her one bottle of formula a day while breastfeeding the remaining feeds. This one bottle gave me a little break and I breastfed her until 11 1/2 months.

Breastfeeding was not easy for me when I started and it was discouraging at times. There is a lot of pressure on moms to get it right. I think some of this pressure needs to be taken off of moms and it should be ok to tell them that breastfeeding is not always easy, you sometimes have to work for it, but that it is ok if you struggle because there is support out there. The key is education and making the support available.

I welcome your comments about your own experiences with breastfeeding as almost every mom I know has had some sort of difficulty.

5 comments:

  1. I think it's ridiculous they are trying to get rid of formula in the hospital. I had to have a c section and I was not able to breastfeed or even hold my baby for 24 hours after because I had high blood pressure. Also, my son was tongue tied and was not able to latch on. If the hospital gets a patient like me or someone who has a more serious problem and are not able to breastfeed, are they willing to let the baby starve until mom and baby gets home? or will the parents need to start bringing their own formula to the hospital?

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  2. I agree completely! It can't be black and white. I think flexibility is key in learning how to breastfeed.

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  3. I am right there with you- if I hadn't "given in" to formula, my child would have starved. I just didn't EVER have enough for him. I'm planning a blog post on this but I've got to wait a bit before I write it because it makes me so upset.
    Gosh, I think most woman want to succeed in breastfeeding to those who can't or don't shouldn't be made to feel any worse about it by making formula seem like something "evil"...

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  4. I know! The first few weeks are tough enough without you being made feel you are a failure if you have to use formula.

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  5. I'm a mom to three boys. I breast fed all three and am still breastfeeding my nine month old. None of my boys ever touched formula. Not that I had an issue using formula, it's just that with major food allergies in the family, it was agreed that breastfeeding was the best route. It was not easy. I am thankful for the most fantastic support I received from the lactation consultant based at the hospital and the wonderful nurses in the maternity ward. With my 9 month old, he was loosing weight in the very beginning. Without their support, I'm not sure what I would have done. I totally recommend any new mom get the much needed support from nurses, family members and others in the health care field and community no matter which way they choose to feed their babies. It is all about choice and what moms believe is the best for their babies.

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