View Single Post
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 08-27-2007, 06:10 PM
LLL_Sarah LLL_Sarah is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 563
How your baby feeds in the long term usually depends on how large you breast capacity is. That is how much milk your body can store at any one time.

If you breast capacity is large then as the baby grows they tend to take less but larger meals. Whereas if your breast capacity is small the baby continues to take lots of smaller meals. The both babies, however, get the same amount of milk during the day.

e.g.

11 x 2.5 oz = 27.5 oz

7 x 4 oz = 28 oz

A fully breastfed baby drinks between 25 and 30 ozs in every 24 hours. This is true for a one month old and a six month old.

It is one of the differences between a breastfed and a bottle fed baby. A breastfed baby continues to drink about the same amount but the composition of the milk changes. It changes from the beginning of the feed to the end of the feed, from the beginning of the day to the end of the day and as the baby grows. Formula milk is always the same and so the only way to get more calories into the baby is to increase the amount of milk the baby is drinking.

Second babies often feed in small feeds as well. This is because the mother has the first child to look after at the same time and so often gets interrupted when feeding the second baby. Thus the baby quickly learns to feed fast before an interruption comes. But because he is feeding fast needs another feed quite quickly.

There is nothing medically wrong with the baby continuing to have lots of short feeds. But sometime the mothers find it inconvenient. Other mothers find it much easier to sit down and feed once an hour for 10 minutes than finding time to sit down and feed for 30 to 45 minutes once every three hours.

One method to try to get the baby to take more milk in each feed is called breast compression.

Dr. Jack Newman also explains how to do Breast Compression on his web site, http://www.breastfeedingonline.com/newman.shtml

Breast Compression at http://www.breastfeedingonline.com/15pdf.pdf

He also has video clips on his web site which can be useful, scroll down until you find them.
Compression and Compression Two under the heading Breast Compression.

Another good technique is Switch Nursing. Switch nursing is changing to the other side when the baby no longer seems interested. Usually when we start feeding the baby is very interested to suck, as the baby slows down we start the breast compression and when the baby slows down with the breast compression we change and get the baby to have the other side. On the other side after the baby starts to slow down we again use the breast compression and when he slows down again swap back to the first side again. We can continue swapping sides as much as we like and for as long as the baby is willing to continue to suck. It is fine to swap sides 8, 9 or 10 times in one feed.

Best wishes,
SARAH
Reply With Quote