Thursday, December 21, 2006

A group that nurtures (Daily Press)

I recently joined the ranks of parenthood, and there's one thing in Williamsburg that made that transition easier: the breast-feeding support group at Sentara Williamsburg Regional Medical Center.

I had my son at the now-shuttered Sentara Williamsburg Community Hospital, and the support group was my introduction to the beautiful new facility. The support group meets in the Yorktown conference room Monday, Wednesday and Thursday mornings for new moms to drop by from 10 a.m. until 11:30 a.m. Thursday sessions are actually called the New Moms Support Group and women who aren't breast-feeding are welcome. Mothers can weigh their babies and get help from Kris Kiley, the hospital's lactation consultant.

One of the reasons this group is so important is that mothers can meet other women going through the disorienting process of trying to feed a newborn baby. Babies can be somewhat demanding and getting a feeding schedule on track can be challenging. I found talking to other moms very helpful. Other women said that it helps with the baby blues to have people to talk to about the everyday challenges.


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Breastfeeding in mealtime, comfort (Central Kentucky News Journal)

I am responding to an article written by Linda Ireland titled "Debating the public and private domain."

Do you know this woman? Have you ever met her or her child? How do you know that she could have covered up? Perhaps, her experience with her baby tells her that her baby would simply have began crying or thrown the blanket off, making it futile. Are you aware that many babies like to look around or into the eyes of their mother while they eat, that they will not nurse if covered up? For some, the blanket is a distraction. Are you aware that nursing comforts a fussy child?

Should she, instead, have allowed her child to scream and cry during the entire flight, just to avoid flashing an unsuspecting passenger? Are you aware that nursing lessens the painful popping sensation of the ears during take off and landing, that a child who is sucking on something is less apt to holler as a result of the discomfort? Are you aware that prolonged pacifier and bottle use can cause dental problems and interfere with milk supply?


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Nursing is normal and not something to hide (Central Kentucky News Journal)

Linda Ireland recently wrote an editorial responding to the New Mexico mother expulsion from a Freedom Airlines flight on Monday, Dec. 4.

As a nursing mother myself, I am offended and appalled that Ireland compared the act of breastfeeding to mouth-breathing and belching.

Nursing a child is normal and not something to be hidden in shame or done in the bathroom.

Ireland suggested that all nursing mothers carry blankets just in case someone around them gets offended. Well, here's a newsflash for you: someone will be offended whether we cover or not.


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Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Airlines ask for dismissal of breast-feeding complaint (Times Argus)

SOUTH BURLINGTON — Two airlines named in a complaint by a woman who was kicked off a flight for breast-feeding have asked the Vermont Human Rights Commission to dismiss it.

Freedom Airlines and Delta Air Lines say women can nurse babies on their planes, but they say the complaint filed by Emily Gillette, 27, of Santa Fe, N.M., which argues that breast-feeding is a right protected by Vermont's Public Accommodations Law, should be dismissed.

"Freedom denies having discriminated against the charging party in any manner whatsoever and specifically denies that any violation of the Vermont Fair Housing and Accommodations Act ... has occurred," Freedom wrote in its response, which was provided by Gillette's attorney, Elizabeth Boepple of Manchester.



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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Nestle

The FDA has posted on their website a warning letter that was sent to Nestle on November 27th. Testing of the formula referenced revealed that they were nutritionally deficient and did not contain the amounts of calcium and phosphorus that are declared on the product label.

Note that the testing was conducted six months ago.

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Monday, December 11, 2006

Breast Feeding In Public Called Into Question (TheDay.com)

Did you hear the one about the woman who got escorted off a plane because she was flashing her boob?
No, it's not a punch line to a really funny joke.

The woman, Emily Gillette, was nursing her 1-year-old daughter. A Delta Air Lines flight attendant offered Gillette a blanket and told her to cover up. When she refused, Gillette, along with her husband and baby, were escorted off the plane.

The result was a dozen or so “nurse-ins,” protests held last month at Delta Air Lines ticket counters at airports around the country.

There's a chance that my liberalist and feminist cards may get yanked for this one, but I agree with the airlines. Not in the fact that they had the family leave the airplane — although how else would they have resolved the situation? — but that the flight attendant offered a blanket.



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Sunday, December 10, 2006

Milk Therapy (Science News)

Breast-milk compounds could be a tonic for adult ills

Catharina Svanborg thought that she already knew how remarkable breast milk is. The immunologist had logged hundreds of lab hours documenting ways in which human milk helps babies fight infections. But when the group decided to use cancerous lung cells to avoid the variability shown by normal cells in laboratory tests, Svanborg and her team at Lund University in Sweden were in for a surprise. They applied breast milk to the cancerous lung cells, and all the cells died. Breast milk killed cancer cells.

"From that moment on, we've been working with it," Svanborg says.



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What exactly is a lactation consultant? (Bradenton Herald)

I have been called by many different titles here at the hospital. I have been referred to as the boob nurse, the milk nurse, the baby lady, and some other curious titles. As you can see at the end of this article however I am actually a lactation consultant (IBCLC: International Board Certified Lactation Consultant), as well as a registered nurse (RN).

What does a lactation actually do is a question that I hear often. A lactation consultant is a health care professional who works with other health care professionals to assure appropriate, evidenced-based management of breast-feeding. Our role is to protect, promote and support breast-feeding through education, counseling and clinical management.

The International Board of Lactation Consultant Examiners bestows that certification after a rigorous exam and proof of completion of at least 190 hours of course work in lactation and 250 hours of supervised clinical/practical practice in lactation. Anyone who sits for the exam is tested on maternal and infant anatomy; physiology and endocrinology; nutrition and biochemistry; pathology; psychology, sociology and anthropology; public health; normal growth and development; ethics and law; and evidence-based management principles.



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Breast-feeding Overcomes A Genetic Tendency Toward Ear Infections, Scientists Discover (Science Daily)

Breast-feeding protects children otherwise made susceptible to ear infections by abnormalities in specific human genes, researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston have discovered.

About 19 percent of children are prone to chronic and recurrent ear infections (known to physicians as "otitis media"). These infections can interfere with language development and lead to learning difficulties. Scientists have long known that genetics plays a role in this vulnerability, but very few investigations have been done to pinpoint the specific genes involved. Their complex relationship with specific infectious agents and environmental factors such as exposure to cigarette smoke and breast-feeding also has remained largely a mystery.

The UTMB study, published in the December issue of the journal Pediatrics, examined genetic samples taken from 505 children in Texas and Kentucky, about 60 percent of whom were classified as "otitis media susceptible" because they had suffered an ear infection before the age of 6 months; had undergone three or more episodes of acute otitis media within a six-month period; had four or more episodes within a 12-month period; or had six or more episodes by age 6. Children who had required drainage tubes to assuage recurrent or persistent ear infections were also placed in the "susceptible" category.



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Guest column: What’s next? Hugging your kids in public? (The Joplin Globe)

My niece Karen has new baby and is feeding her the old-fashioned way. While in the hospital, I observed her telling one of her male relatives to “turn around if you don’t want to see this,” meaning she was about to breastfeed, and the man had apparently expressed an aversion to witnessing it. I found this flat-out hilarious.

First of all, we live in a culture in which breasts are used to sell everything from light beer to luxury cars. You can find wet-T-shirt contests on basic cable; cleavage is considered suitable attire for cocktails, the office, and Sunday Mass; but let a breast be used for the one purpose for which it is clearly designed and some people, and some men in particular, find it downright obscene.



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Epidural babies can't get grip on what's breast (The Australian)

WOMEN who give birth with the aid of pain-relieving epidurals find it harder to breastfeed than those who give birth naturally, an Australian study has found.
The research suggests some of the drugs used in epidurals make their way into babies' bloodstreams, subtly affecting their brains and development for weeks afterwards -- including making them less willing to breastfeed. The study by University of Sydney epidemiologist Siranda Torvaldsen adds to a growing body of knowledge that makes a link between the use of the pain-killing drug fentanyl in epidurals and problems with breastfeeding. During an epidural a catheter is inserted into the spine to allow the infusion of pain-killing drugs. These deaden the nerves that relay sensations of pain from the lower body.

In a commentary on the research, published today in International Breastfeeding Journal, British scientist Sue Jordan suggests the impact of epidurals on breastfeeding should be officially classed as an "adverse drug reaction". Dr Jordan, senior lecturer in applied therapeutics at Swansea University, said women given the infusions should be offered extra support to stop their infants being "disadvantaged by this hidden, but far-reaching, adverse drug reaction".



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Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Breast-Feeding Offers Resilience Against Psychosocial Stress in Children (Medscape)

November 28, 2006 — Breast-feeding is linked to resilience against psychosocial stress, such as divorce, in children, according to the results of an observational study reported in the December issue of the Archives of Disease in Childhood.

"Some early life exposures may result in a well controlled stress response, which can reduce stress related anxiety," write S. M. Montgomery, MD, of the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, and colleagues. "Breast feeding may be a marker of some relevant exposures.... Potentially, these could operate through a number of mechanisms associated with factors such as maternal characteristics, development of the mother-child bond, and early mother-child interactions."



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Perfecting the Formula (Technology Review)

Researchers have identified compounds in breast milk that might account for its oft-discussed ability to protect against certain diseases.

When it comes to infant nutrition, there's plenty of evidence to suggest that a mother's milk is not just the best food: it's also a baby's best defense against bacteria and viruses. Yet the reasons haven't been clear. Now, researchers at the University of California at Davis and at Agilent Technologies have identified a class of complex sugars in breast milk that may act as molecular protectors against gastrointestinal and other diseases.



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Babies pay for poverty with their lives (Yorkshire Post Today)

BABIES in Yorkshire are dying needlessly because of poverty, poor housing and a low level of mothers breastfeeding, a major new investigation has revealed.
A study into why babies born in Bradford are more likely to die before their first birthday than anywhere else in the region is to be published today by the district's Infant Mortality Commission.


A copy of the report, obtained by the Yorkshire Post, identifies poverty as one of the reasons for the high number of babies in Bradford who die and highlights poor nutrition, women not breastfeeding and poor take-up of immunisation as issues to tackle.


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Mothers’ Milk Bank (News 8 Austin)

April Rudge from Mothers’ Milk Bank talks about what her nonprofit needs this holiday season.

Q: Tell us a little bit about the organization.

A: We’re a nonprofit organization that serves a large area, mainly Texas, but other states as well. We accept donations of milk, we pasteurize that milk and then it is dispensed by prescription only to mostly premature and fragile babies that are in the neonatal ICU.


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Attention Massachusetts and New York mothers: Time to act on breastfeeding rights! (Motherwear breastfeeding blog)

Live in Massachusetts or New York? Now's your chance to voice your support for breastfeeding rights. Bills pending in your state legislatures would improve breastfeeding policy in your state.

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Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Nursing past three (Ashland Daily Tidings)

When we sat down to lunch this afternoon, my girlfriend Humaiya, also the mother of three children, marveled at my son Etani, who was putting rice on his fork with his hands and then wobbling it up to his mouth. "Look at him eat!" she cried. "He's not still nursing, is he?!"

"I'm planning to rent a house near where he goes to college," I joked to another friend who asked me in an exasperated voice when I was going to wean my son. "That way he can keep nursing."

Etani turned three in October and he nurses before his mid-day nap and at bedtime. I sometimes nurse him at other times too, when he feels sad or is really overtired or overwhelmed. He settles right down, his whole body relaxes, and he sighs with deep contentment. He doesn't have the vocabulary to tell me in words but if he did I think he'd say that nursing makes him feel safe and protected and loved.



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Monday, December 04, 2006

New moms and newborns need privacy, study shows (USA Today)

Flowers are always nice, but perhaps the best gift you can give a brand-new mom is some quiet time alone with her baby.

Now that hospital visiting hours — not to mention staffing — are 24/7, maternity units are taking steps to minimize interruptions and lower the volume. They recognize that lack of privacy can get breast-feeding off to a rocky start, while lack of sleep might play a role in postpartum depression.

A study in the latest Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and Neonatal Nursing found that women typically experienced dozens of interruptions during their first day after delivering a baby.

Researchers recorded the number and duration of visits and phone calls from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. for 29 brand-new moms who intended to breast-feed. During that period, the mothers on average experienced 54 visits or phone calls, averaging 17 minutes in length. On the other hand, they were alone with their baby (or their baby and the baby's father) only 24 times on average, and half of those episodes were nine minutes or less.


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When it's feeding time, moms have rights, too (The Republican)

Here in Massachusetts, the cradle of liberty, there is no law guaranteeing mothers the right to nurse their babies in public.

The need for such a law was made obvious recently when Emily Gillette was ordered off a Freedom Airlines flight in Burlington, Vt., because she refused to cover her baby's head with a blanket while breast-feeding.

The incident sparked demonstrations at airports across the country, including Bradley International Airport, where one demonstrator, Susan Parker, the mother of a 10-month-old daughter, told the Associated Press, "It's a basic human thing that we are doing and we should be able to do it in public without being kicked off planes; without being told in sit in bathrooms. It's a human right."



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BREAST-FEED RIGHTS BILL (New York Post)

December 4, 2006 -- Declaring it's time to advertise the right to breast-feed in New York, State Sen. Liz Krueger has introduced a "Breast-feeding Mothers' Bill of Rights."

The legislation would consolidate existing laws into a list of rights to be posted and distributed in maternity wards.

One rule would ban the makers of baby formula from pressuring new moms in hospitals into using their product. Another would stress a mother's right to keep her newborn near after delivery.



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Wet nurses latest way for rich Chinese to flash cash (Sydney Morning Herald)

LUXURY cars, yachts and diamonds are commonplace for China's super-rich, but a new status symbol has just been added to their list of must-haves - the wet nurse.

The practice of infants being suckled by women other than their mothers was branded decadent by Mao Zedong and was stamped out by the country's postwar leaders.

But in the booming cities of the east coast, the moneyed classes are no longer constrained by the taboos of their Communist overlords and they are looking to the past excesses of their ancestors. Pu Yi, the subject of Bernardo Bertolucci's 1987 film, The Last Emperor, was suckled well into his teens.



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Help for nursing moms (Cincinnati Enquirer)

As family and friends raise their glasses during the holidays, mothers of nursing infants often raise a sobering question: How do I know when the occasional glass of eggnog or wine is out of my system, and my milk?

"We get lots of calls about that, especially with New Year's," says Candace Hochstrasser, a nurse and lactation consultant with St. Elizabeth Medical Center in Edgewood.

Elizabeth Smith and Julie Jumonville, first-time moms from Texas, think they have an answer.



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Sunday, December 03, 2006

Lampert Smith: Blocking lunch? Face fine (Wisconsin State Journal)

Soon it could be a crime to interfere with breast-feeding anywhere in Madison or Dane County.

Come between a baby and his lunch, buddy, and you'll face a fine of between $25 and $250, under a draft Madison ordinance.

City Council President Austin King has proposed an ordinance that would make it legal for a woman to breast- feed a baby or pump breast milk anywhere they are legally allowed to be. (It doesn't apply to private homes.)



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Friday, December 01, 2006

KRUEGER INTRODUCES BREASTFEEDING MOTHERS' BILL OF RIGHTS (Amherst Times)

Legislation Codifies Mothers' Rights Into Single, Concise Document; Bans Commercial Interests from Pressuring New Mothers Into Using Formula



Seeking to codify a concise, easily understood document, State Senator Liz Krueger has introduced the Breastfeeding Mothers' Bill of Rights. The legislation, S8511, draws upon New York State Rules and Regulations, the Best Hospital Practices and the World Health Organization Baby Friendly guidelines.

"Breastfeeding is completely natural, and is in the best interests of our children. Unfortunately, the positive medical benefits that breastfeeding provides the mother and her child often go unrealized because our culture discourages women from starting to breastfeed, or continuing beyond a few weeks," said Krueger. "The Breastfeeding Mothers' Bill of Rights is common-sense legislation that empowers and supports these new mothers by providing them the information they need prior to, and after the birth of their infant so they can make the best decisions for their child and themselves."


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