Posts Tagged ‘Breastfeeding’
Breastfeeding or Artificial Feeding?
Which is better?
Breast milk is undoubtedly the best food for newborns. However, not all women can breastfeed. For example, some women who have had breast operations may have difficulty breastfeeding. Fortunately, there are a number of tools to aid breastfeeding in the market. Request information from your doctor, midwife or nurse.
There are also women who, for various reasons, do not want to breastfeed. Talk about it with the gynecologist, with the midwife or nurse can help them go away fears or objections or to find alternatives.
Mothers have the right to choose what they think is best for them and their child. However, they are encouraged to seek all the information possible so they can make their decision based on facts, not assumptions. Read the rest of this entry »
The Best Way to Feed The Baby (Part 1)
Breastfeeding is an instance of social mobilization is becoming more important every year. But there is both reliable, scientifically proven, and the other, which borders on myth and lies, then some true or false about the best way to feed the baby.
- Breastfeeding helps you lose, naturally, the accumulated excess kilos during pregnancy.
- The more often you breast-feed the baby, the faster you empty the mammary gland and, consequently, produce less milk.
- It is not advisable to drink too much water before feeding, because it can not produce milk and water in sufficient quantities to feed baby.
- If a child is not gaining well, it is possible that his mother’s milk is of poor quality.
- Breast-feeding beyond six months is a more affective than nutritional value.
- It is best not to give too much time to nurse on one breast to avoid completely empty.
- It is good to wait for the breasts to fully fill the baby.
- A baby of two months requires approximately seven to eight feedings or feedings of breast milk at four months this number decreased to six shots, and only after that age need between four and five.
- If a very small baby asleep for over three hours and does not claim food is good wake.
- Some children may have allergies to milk.
- It is not always necessary to use both breasts at each feeding or nursing.
- Breastfeeding a child for a long time can cause obesity when he grows up.
- It is important that the child gets used from newborn to breastfeed every 3 hours and keep that frequency.
- Position the baby “belly to belly” or “tummy to tummy area helps prevent having cramps.
- It’s bad diet to lose weight during lactation.
Answer 1:
TRUE. The purpose of the accumulation of fat during pregnancy, is precisely to form a reserve for the production of milk when the child is born. Therefore the more a woman breast feed your child more such reserves will be consumed and not need to do then any other diet to regain weight.
Answer 2:
FALSE. Milk production increases the more it stimulates, ie if a woman puts the baby to the breast more often, it sucks and stimulate milk letdown. The more frequently occurring this stimulus will produce more milk the mother. The production of milk has been shown to be related to the frequency of feedings. The amount of milk begins to decrease when the shots are rare or restricted.
Answer 3:
FALSE. Breast milk is composed of water as a main component, so it is very important that the mother is well hydrated. The nutritional composition of breast milk does not vary with the amount of water that the mother drinks. However, if you do not have enough fluid milk production decreases.
Answer 4:
FALSE. There is no low-quality milk. Scientific studies show that even malnourished women are able to produce milk of sufficient quality to meet the growth needs of the child (unless they were too severe malnutrition). In most cases, poor weight gain is due to low consumption of milk or an organic problem child. Insufficient consumption may be due to poor positioning, lack of family support, low production due to lack of stimulation or low fluid intake.
Answer 5: