Volume 68, Issue 4 | Page 8

MOTHERS IN MEDICINE BREAST FEEDING SUPPORT BY MEDICAL PROVIDERS (NOT JUST PRIMARY CARE): THE HOW AND WHY IT MATTERS AUTHOR Claire Cowley, MD The 1:00 am phone call to the primary care doctor: “Dr. So-And- So, baby Gumby has lost 10% of its birth weight. Do you want to supplement with some formula?” What do you say, what do you ask? How old is this infant? Frequently, cesarean section infants have an inflated weight secondary to a fluid bolus in mom prior to delivery, exaggerating the weight loss. Is the infant nursing well, frequently every two hours, vigorously? What are the intakes and outputs? One wet and one dirty diaper per day of age is normal in the first five days of life. If the baby is vigorous and nursing well, I would say, “Let’s see how the baby looks at rounds in the morning.” What are the dangers of unnecessary supplementation? There are multiple, but for this readership, a principal set would be: undermining a woman’s confidence at a fragile moment in her ability to do this task she’s determined to do; the alteration of gut flora; the shorter duration of, and the exclusivity of breastfeeding. We are trusted as experts. When we order that supplement (unnecessarily, possibly) we say that this is the right way, that breastfeeding doesn’t matter. Baby is jittery and has a marginal glucose: once again there is a lot of research on this but for simplicity, remember glucose gel. Nurseries can readily utilize this to get past a brief episode as breastfeeding is established. Remember that newborns need 10 to 12 feedings per day, initially. That is key. What else can you do as a primary care provider? If mom and baby are stable, keep mom and baby together after birth through the first feeding and room-in afterwards. If there are problems with lactation, utilize the services of a Lactation Consultant. If a supplement is needed, use donor human milk, a protein hydrolysate formula or regular formula, in that order. Now the why it matters: what if I told you that we could halve 6 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE