This video has been produced by UNICEF to save the lives of babies by making sure they hav
This video has been produced by UNICEF to save the lives of babies by making sure they have what they need to begin breastfeeding in the first few moments of life. And what they need is to be placed on their mother, naked skin to naked skin, and left to get on with it.
Do make sure you stay with it until you see the latch happening at the end.
All babies are born to breastfeed, and as you can see, come with the instincts and skills hardwired. Unfortunately, many modern birth practices disrupt this process and prevent it happening. Baby is taken from mother, washed, dressed, and handed around. Well meaning helpers try to push baby onto the breast, or force it to open its mouth before it is ready. Sometimes the baby is trying, and someone will push the back of the baby's head up onto the breast - would you do what was wanted if someone treated you like that? Drugs from modern births pass into the baby's bloodstream, and babies can come out sleepy and disorganised. Sometimes it's a day or two before baby 'wakes up' and by that time, damage has been done by pushing the baby and stressing out the mother.
If your baby doesn't achieve this 'miracle' in the first few moments of life, don't despair! You're not alone! Many mothers have sleepy and uninterested babies and go on to a happy and successfull breastfeeding relationship.
Protect your milk supply by stimulating your breasts and emptying them regularly, and keep baby naked skin to skin on your chest. Babies can find your breast at any point in the first few weeks, so Don't Panic!
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/concerns/baby/back-to-breast.html
But it is lovely to see how it can happen, if all the conditions are right. :-)
There is a lovely clip of it happening in a more 'Western' setting, on:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLboKrCeVOA
If you are failed by lactation services, or from lack of support, and end up having to use formula, you should know of the risks, and how to minimse them. This video gives the facts and references you'll need.
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=M8BjnGCNahU#GU5U2spHI_4
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 233,788
This is an excellent video, by the wonderful Dr Jack Newman, showing a classic cross-cradl
This is an excellent video, by the wonderful Dr Jack Newman, showing a classic cross-cradle hold, and a baby latching well.
Notice how gentle and respectful of the baby Dr Newman, and the mother, are. Only two interventions happen - one to pull the baby's hand gently out of the camera view - so you can see what's happening, and one very gentle encouraging finger to the chin after latch has happened.
No one is telling this baby she doesn't know what to do! :-) No one is 'traffic wardening' the mother, and making her lose confidence. This is good stuff, and if it doesn't match your own 'support' experience, find better support! There a variety of volunteer organisations who will give you this sort of support - do use them! :-)
http://www.llli.org/
http://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/
http://www.breastfeedingnetwork.org.uk/
This baby is small and quite young. Notice how easily the mother is supporting the baby's shoulders and neck, and managing to keep the length of the baby's body snug and secure across her body. This can be an excellent hold for new mothers, but all that's important is that you and baby are comfortable, and the breastfeeding is working well. As baby gets older, and heavier, Mum and Baby will find different holds that keep them both feeling supported and happy.
The important part of this video is what's happening at the mouth/nipple exchange. You hear Dr Newman say to wait for the 'gape' and then you let baby attach. The point is that quite a lot of breast needs to go into the mouth, for milk to transfer.
Baby having too shallow a latch is a classic way to have sore nipples. If it's painful - something is wrong!
Incidentally that jaw action you see is one reason breastfeeding contributes so much to the overall development of the baby - that jaw action is working on moving the plates in the baby's head back into place from the birth canal squish, and is building excellent muscle tone in the jaw and face, helping build up to good chewing and speaking skills.
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/start/basics/latch-resources.html
Is another good resource - don't make the mistake of thinking the hand in this animation is 'pushing', it's supporting after the event, not leading it.
http://www.wiessinger.baka.com/bfing/howworks/latchtalk.html
http://users.iptelecom.net.ua/~vylkas/flash/baby12b_content. html
and, of course...
http://www.drjacknewman.com/index.php?option=com_content&tas k=view&id=5&Itemid=6
Good Luck!
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 5,061,788
Excellent Feeding.
This is a sequence of four babies, running down the scale from
R
Excellent Feeding.
This is a sequence of four babies, running down the scale from
Really Good Drinker 1/4 http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=yeqnas3Uf2A
Quite Good Drinker 2/4
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=3trJWIxSSys
On and Off drinker 3/4
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=AsPIuSit9do
Nibbling, Not Drinking 4/4
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=xlp5xSiR3pE
How Much Milk Baby Is Getting is a fraught question for many mothers. Especially when well meaning family members, used to pouring vast amounts of formula down their own baby's throats say... "but how much milk is she getting?" Many a new mother has panicked at that question, and reached for the bottle.
If you are stressed and wondering, take a moment to run through the 4 babies here, and examine their breastfeeding technique.
Do note that this is not a latch issue! All these babies are latched well - but their skill levels on breastfeeding are different.
Baby 1 is an excellent breastfeeder. Look at the jaw and cheek muscles go! Huge amounts of milk are being extracted from this mother's breasts. Excellent muscle tone is being built by those jaw muscles, and the mouth is being filled with milk fast and furious. This baby will not need to feed for more than a few minutes, before falling off in a Milk Induced Coma! There is an excellent match here between the baby's internal mouth shape, and the mother's breast, and a lot of milk is being extracted quickly.
In the second clip, a good swallowing motion (active jaw and muscles) is clearly shown by the baby, and nice pauses where milk is flowing into the mouth. This baby is getting a great deal of milk from the mother. It's not quite the express pump of baby 1, but baby 2 is clearly getting a lot of milk!
Baby 3 is a bit off and on. Some good drinking, but with a rest and relax in between bouts of drinking. This baby will take longer to get full up than either baby 1 or baby 2.
Baby 4 is not getting that much milk, as he's only nibbling on the breast. There is some transfer at the end, when you see the jaw move and then the 'pause' as the mouth fills up with milk. Baby 4 may spend a long time at the breast to fill up. There may also be fussing and arching of the back, as baby gets fed up with not much milk.
It's important for any new mother to recognise that babies do the breastfeeding - hence all these different levels of skills, and that babies get better the more they practise. Jaw muscles build up, mouth shape adapts and grows, and baby gets better at it. So don't panic if your baby is more Baby 4 than Baby 1!
Some hints and tips to help you out:
Basics first - when do you feed the baby?
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/start/basics/hunger-cues.html
How do I know baby is getting enough milk?:
If baby is peeing well, and having a pooh at least once a day - all is well. Counting wet nappies/diapers is one way to know everything is okay. No need to panic and weigh the baby! What goes in, must come out!
http://www.kellymom.com/newman/04enough_milk.html
http://www.llli.org/FAQ/enough.html
http://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/bfinfo/supply.html#how
The info on this section continues on video 2 of the sequence...
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=3trJWIxSSys
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 205,854
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The breast is made up of soft tissue, with a fine line of milk ducts running over the tisu
The breast is made up of soft tissue, with a fine line of milk ducts running over the tisue, and under the skin. They are producing milk constantly, and the act of pressing down gently on the breast, will make the milk flow faster while you press down. When you release, the flow drops back to normal.
This is what your milk ducts look like, and where they are in the breast: http://www.biochem.biomedchem.uwa.edu.au/Our_People/home_pag es/academic_staff/hartmann/peter_hartmann/download
Breast compression, as Dr Jack Newman explains clearly here, can help when you have a struggling baby who is upset milk isn't coming out fast enough. It's a way of using the milk production system in the breast, to encourage faster flow just when you need it.
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/supply/milkproduction.html
Not every mother will need to use breast compressions, but it is a useful tool in the toolbox. It is important to squeeze down gently, in a massage motion, as opposed to a pinch. Restricting the milk ducts, with too tight a bra, or restrictive closing, or pinching them hard, can cause plugged ducts, which are painful, and can lead to mastitis, an infection.
This is an excellent handout that explains breast compressions:
http://www.kellymom.com/newman/15breast_compression.html
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 179,472
The huge value in this tiny video is... stop pressing down and poking on your nipple like
The huge value in this tiny video is... stop pressing down and poking on your nipple like that! Getting milk out of your breast requires a lot of the breast tissue BEHIND the nipple to be compressed - it's got nothing to do with the nipple itself, in that sense.
Baby sucking on your nipple, and/or you poking and prodding your nipples and trying to get your gold milk (colostrum) out, may swell up your nipples and prevent the milk coming out at all!
Hand expression will get out milk, and let you get to know your own breasts:
http://www.breastfeeding.com/helpme/helpme_images_express...
http://www.lactationinstitute.org/MANUALEX.html
http://www.bflrc.com/ljs/breastfeeding/knack.htm
Sometimes, nipples get swollen from IV fluids in labour, or from too much milk coming in very quickly. A swollen nipple will not let down well. A swollen breast with too much milk in it is called 'engorgement' and if this happens to you when you transition from gold to white milk, hand express to get some comfort - or put baby on full time and let baby suck it out!
An excellent technique to use if too swollen, is called Reverse Pressure Softening - scroll down to the bottom of this page:
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/concerns/mom/rev_pressure_soft...
Do note that this mother is trickling gold milk (colostrum) and a little trickle like this is all baby needs for the first few days. There is another clip showing white milk being ejected in streams, but so far, we can't get it past YouTube, for some bizarre reason.
If a baby is sucking on your nipple, and does not have a lot of breast tissue in its mouth - you will be in pain. You may also develop cracks and blisters on the nipple, as it will be being squished and squashed. An excellent video showing you where your nipple should be can be found on:
http://www.ameda.com/breastfeeding/started/latch_on.aspx
And a help sheet on nipple pain can be found on:
http://www.kellymom.com/newman/03a-sore_nipples.html
and
http://www.llli.org/FAQ/sore.html
http://www.llli.org/FAQ/heal.html
Be patient - your milk will come. Good Luck on learning hand expression!
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 1,865,127
This superb video was made by Ameda, who make breast pumps. It's wonderful to see a comme
This superb video was made by Ameda, who make breast pumps. It's wonderful to see a commercial company make the effort to hire excellent and well qualified people to produce a high quality marketing video that is informative and exhibiting Best Practice. Well Done Ameda!
We can't reccomend this video highly enough, but although Ameda make it available for file share on the site (presumably they are happy with viral replication - it is a marketing tool after all!) we can't get it to load properly.
We urge you to go to the site and see all of it:
http://www.ameda.com/breastfeeding/started/latch_on.aspx
The site also contains excellent breastfeeding support advice.
The pity of it being somewhat speeded up here, is you can't get a sense of the wonderful 'bobbing' motion that the baby is doing, as it signals to the mother that it would like to breastfeed, as it's getting hungry.
This 'bobbing' is an excellent cue to get baby onto Mum's breast asap. Learning your baby's feeding cues will save a lot of anxiety. Baby escalates up to starting to cry and get distressed as hunger kicks in (it's never felt hungry in the womb, so hunger is a new and powerful feeling for it. Powerful feelings are quite scary for small babies - they haven't a clue what's going on.)
A good resource on feeding cues can be found here:
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/start/basics/hunger-cues.html
The latch info in the animation is so good, it doesn't need any comment from us. There are a whole list of latch links that complement this video on "First Latch":
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Ox8ht-EVnQA
If you have already got nipple problems because of a shallow latch, there are links to help on "Poor Latch Good Latch":
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=IQYThWMHgjI
The sheer competency of this five day old baby, as it seeks to latch itself to the mother, is just so wonderful to watch! This is another baby that knows exactly what it is doing, and Mum is doing a great job in supporting and helping baby.
However, as we explain in 'Breast Crawl', not all babies come out ready and willing to latch like this as modern birth practices can get in the way. If your baby is sleepy, disorganised or refusing the breast, the info and links on 'Breast Crawl' will help you:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=G3K87l9hNOE
Before we go - we are only reccomending this video, and the excellent breastfeeding advice on the Ameda site - not their products. None of us have ever used them, so we cannot comment.
Do go to the site, however, and watch this baby find that nipple and self latch! :-)
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 37,287
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The shocking news for most people is not that breast is no longer best, but that formula i
The shocking news for most people is not that breast is no longer best, but that formula is not benign.
http://www.theecologist.org/archive_detail.asp?content_id=58 6
The risks of formula break down into the product itself, the absence of breastfeeding, and the making of the formula.
Formula is made from modified cow's milk. On contact with the gut, formula changes the ph balance of the baby's stomach, and this alters the ability of the gut to mature properly. This impacts on both the gut's ability to absorb nutrition, and to act as an immune defense against infection.
http://www.drjaygordon.com/development/bf/supplement.asp
http://www.breastfeeding.org/bfacts/bottle.html
Lack of breastfeeding means that babies on formula miss out on a complex range of basic building blocks for normal growth.
http://www.wicworks.ca.gov/breastfeeding/ResourceDocs/4aHowD oesForWAFBF_Apr7eng.pdf
And even if they add in fake building blocks, they don't always work:
http://cornucopia.org/index.php/replacing-mother-infant-form ula-report/
Some of these are major life threatening building blocks, such as the oral facial development that keeps sleep apnea at bay in later life, some are small and much more difficult to track. Who is going to miss 5 IQ points if you are an A+ student? No one. But if you are a D+ student, and those 5 points would have taken you to C, that's a life changing big deal. Happy thriving and healthy babies have gone on to develop heart disease or diabetes in later life, and lack of breastfeeding was the cause of it, but who sees that 30 years later?. And the shocking facts are that more formula fed babies die than breastfed ones - even in the 'West'.
http://www.babyreference.com/InfantDeaths.htm
Formula feeding increases the risks that your baby will have an illness, and for a few, that's a life threatening illness. It's appalling that this info is not common knowledge - but a fortune in shareholder's profits rests on the facts being kept away from consumers:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08 /30/AR2007083002198_pf.html
Finally, powdered infant formula is not sterile. Manufacturing makes it impossible to produce it that way, and as many as 14% of all batches of formula are contanimated by bacteria such as salmonella and E.sakazakii.
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/110/4 /833
http://www.ibfan.org/english/activities/contaminants/govresp onses1204.doc
That's why you have to heat the water - not to make the water safe, but to make the powder safer. Because of the presence of these bugs, the WHO recommends that newborns under 8 weeks old do not receive powdered formula, but only have UHT sterile liquid packs.
Info that would have saved the life of one baby in Belguim recently as well as the Tennessee baby in the earlier link:
http://boycottnestle.blogspot.com/2007/10/ruling-in-belgium. html
Not only are there bugs in some batches of powdered formula, once made up, formula is an excellent growth medium for them. So formula safety is crucial if you're using it. In the UK, 5 times more formula fed babies are treated in hospital for gastroenteritis than breastfed ones. Good hygiene is vital in protecting your baby:
http://www.who.int/foodsafety/publications/micro/pif_guideli nes.pdf
Left over formula that's been fed to a baby should be thrown away after one hour.
These risks from contanimated formula are bad enough, but if you live in a resource poor area, where there is poor hygiene and dirty water, formula feeding kills 3500 babies every day. And formula companies relentlessly push their products in these areas, regardless of the death toll:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2007/may/15/medicineandhe alth.lifeandhealth
http://youtube.com/watch?v=SNYDPKQOVUE
There is an international code to protect babies' health by restricting advertising and promotion of breastmilk substitutes:
http://www.ibfan.org/site2005/Pages/article.php?art_id=51&iu i=1
Dr Gribble was speaking at the ABA's "Hot Milk" conference in August 2007. http://uk.youtube.com/user/MumsRight http://www.breastfeeding.asn.au podcasts are at http://mumsright.libsyn.com
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Added: 1 month ago
Views: 5,488
Babies breastfeed, and if they are very lucky, in the West, they are allowed to follow the
Babies breastfeed, and if they are very lucky, in the West, they are allowed to follow their biological norm and breastfeed into toddlerhood.
There is no 'natural' time to fully wean an infant, and thus refuse it your breast. All infants give up breastfeeding themselves, when they have finished with it, and move on. This usually occurs sometime between their 3rd and 4th birthday, but many leave the breast earlier, some leave the breast later.
http://www.kathydettwyler.org/detwean.html
Culture, and how we live our lives, usually interferes with the infant's decision, and imposes a 'set' time on the activity. This can be from as early as 6 weeks!
Jesus, as part of his own culture, was probably breastfeeding until he was 3 years old, and then there would have been a weaning party, for everyone in the community to celebrate his growing into another phase of his life.
http://www.askdrsears.com/html/2/t026400.asp
3 years is a common 'set time' for many cultures, as it appears to give the child as much support and comfort and brain building milk as it needs, and then returns the mother to fertility for another child once those needs have been met.
The Koran asks that every mother allow their baby to breastfeed for at least 2 years.
The West (where sexual ownership of the female's body has deemed that breasts are first and foremost sexual, as opposed to how you feed babies) is the most severe in repressing breastfeeding toddlers. Such is the confusion and anxiety about breasts, there are ingrained attitudes that even newborn babies breastfeeding is actually an imposition on the sexual nature of the breast! Some areas of countries such as the USA, demands that male babies are weaned from the breast faster than female ones, as the sexual nature of the breast somehow threatens the father, the mother, and the baby.
This flies in the face of all the scientific, and social, research into the issue. Time and again, the benefits of normal term nursing - allowing the baby to continue to breastfeed as it chooses to - are shown in study after study. With a safe and secure, comforting and loving physical environment from which to view the painful and confusing world that is toddlerhood, the toddler still having access to the breast is more secure, more resilient, more confident and more independent than those forcibly weaned before their time. And still benefittng greatly from the unique nutrition that builds their brains and bones and blood perfectly.
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/bfextended/index.html
Mothers benefit too, with protection from breast cancer etc, lost to the mother who has weaned, increasing her risk of such illness. Oxytocin from the breastfeeding biology, floods both mother and child with contentment, and helps both overcome the stresses of toddlerhood.
Therefore, the children least likely to benefit from the astounding brain building abilities of human milk, and the ones most in need of developing emotional resilience, are the 'most privileged' on the face of the planet. The cultures with so much, often give their infants too little.
The joy you can see on this 2 year old's face, says it all, really. Her world is overflowing with the milk of human kindness.
http://www.wiessinger.baka.com/bfing/older/mouths.html
The World Health Organisation recommends that all babies are allowed to receive only breastmilk for the first six months of their lives, and then to be allowed to breastfeed for a minimum of two years. Thereafter, breastfeeding should continue for as long as mother and child mutually desire.
http://www.who.int/child-adolescent-health/NUTRITION/global_ strategy.htm
The contradictions and confusions in the West are so extreme, that a mother allowing her toddler to breastfeed, can be viewed as abnormal, when she lives in a culture that uses images of breasts, to sell cars. Go figure.
http://one-of-those-women.blogspot.com/2008/01/normal-nursin g-donovandettwyler-article.html
Few mothers start their journey with their breastfeeding babies, with the intent to keep going past 2 years of age. Most fall into just putting off the decision on giving up on something so worthwhile, and so important to their child. Pressure from others can be unbearable and some mothers wean to stop the criticism...
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/criticism.html
http://touchinglynaive.wordpress.com/2007/11/14/extended-bre astfeeding/
... but mostly, the attitude normal term nursing mothers take is.. if it ain't broke, it don't need fixed.
http://www.babble.com/content/articles/columns/extremeparent ing/001/
You can post photos of your own breastfeeding toddler, at
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=21420487704
and there is a wonderful compilation video of breastfeeding children on:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=942FRjAJhxU
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Added: 5 months ago
Views: 4,825,309
to give the breast, is to give life...
This amazingly wonderful video is a public informa
to give the breast, is to give life... This amazingly wonderful video is a public information broadcast from Puerto Rico. The joy in this video needs no explanation from us. The makers of the video are reading your comments, and they too are very happy! :-)
The information on our video "Breastfeeding Toddlers" will be useful to those who had no idea that children normally breastfeed well into the age when they are walking, talking, and dancing!
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=vHgZn8OXA9Q
As a result of comments on 'nipple twiddling', some of you might like to read this one: The Need to Knead
http://web.archive.org/web/20000919174254/http://www.kjsl.co m/~boynews/needtoknead.html
and this one: Nursing Manners
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/older-baby/nursing-manners.html
The song is "Duerme Negrito" sung by Mercedes Sosa, a famous Argentinian singer.
It is based on a traditional lullabye, sung to the baby to make it sleep, as the Mama tells the baby how hard she has worked in the fields all day, to bring little special treats to the baby. 'Duerme Negrito' means 'sleep little black boy' and 'negrito' and 'negrita' are terms of endearment for babies in the culture. The lady who wrote to tell me of the meaning, says she remembers being called 'negrita' by her mother, and she was as fair skinned as could be! For those who may like to lull their own negrito to sleep with this music, I tracked down the song to two albums of Mercedes Sosa's work:
30 Anos: Verve ASIN: B0000015TL
Mercedes Sosa en Vivo: Universal ASIN: B0000015SU
The production credits are:
Public broadcast to promote breastfeeding Title: La Teta Director: Álvaro Aponte-Centeno Producer: Cristina Molina Parrilla DP: Carlos Díaz Song: "Duerme Negrito" Composer: Atahualpa Yupanqui Interpreted by: Mercedes Sosa 2 Gatos, Inc. Location: Puerto Rico
Ms Sosa is nicknamed 'La Negra' in Argentina, for her waterfall of shiny black hair. :-)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes_Sosa
There is quite a few Sosa songs on YouTube, including her singing Duerme Negrito live...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUZwywZivIY
The song is copyright UGM, YouTube Allow, Everywhere
There are several dozen versions of Duerme Negrito across YouTube!
Duerme duerme negrito Que tu mama 'ta en el campo negrito Duerme duerme mobila Que tu mama 'ta en el campo mobila
Te va trae' codornices para ti Te va trae' rica fruta para ti Te va trae' carne de cerdo para ti Te va trae' muchas cosas para ti Y si negro no se duerme Viene el diablo blanco y zas! ... Le come la patita chicapumba Chicapumba apumba chicapum ... Duerme duerme negrito Que tu mama 'ta en el campo negrito
Trabajando Trabajando duramente Trabajando si Trabajando y va de luto Trabajando si
Trabajando y no le pagan Trabajando si
Trabajando y va tosiendo Trabajando si Pa'l negrito chiquitito Pa'l negrito si
Trabajando si Trabajando si
Duerme duerme negrito Que tu mama 'ta en el campo negrito
Negrito ... Negrito ...
Recop: Atahualpa Yupanqui
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Added: 5 months ago
Views: 117,155
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