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Is my
baby getting enough milk?
Breastfeeding mothers frequently ask
how to know their babies are getting
enough milk. The breast is not the
bottle, and it is not possible to
hold the breast up to the light to
see how many ounces or millilitres
of milk the baby drank. Our number
obsessed society makes it difficult
for some mothers to accept not
seeing exactly how much milk the
baby receives. However, there are
ways of knowing that the baby is
getting enough. In the long run,
weight gain is the best indication
whether the baby is getting enough,
but rules about weight gain
appropriate for bottle fed babies
may not be appropriate for breastfed
babies.
Ways of knowing
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Baby's nursing is
characteristic. A baby
who is obtaining good amounts of
milk at the breast sucks in a
very characteristic way. When a
baby is getting milk (he is not
getting milk just because he has
the breast in his mouth and is
making sucking movements), you
will see a pause at the point of
his chin after he opens to the
maximum and before he closes his
mouth, so that one suck is (open
mouth wide-->pause-->close
mouth). If you wish to
demonstrate this to yourself,
put your index or other finger
in your mouth and suck as if you
were sucking on a straw. As you
draw in, your chin drops and
stays down as long as you are
drawing in. When you stop
drawing in, your chin comes back
up. This same pause that is
visible at the baby's chin
represents a mouthful of milk
when the baby does it at the
breast. The longer the pause,
the more the baby got. Once you
know about the pause you can cut
through so much of the nonsense
breastfeeding mothers are being
told—like feed the baby twenty
minutes on each side. A baby who
does this type of sucking (with
the pauses) for twenty minutes
straight might not even take the
second side. A baby who nibbles
(doesn't drink) for 20 hours
will come off the breast hungry.
See our
videos that show this pause in
the baby’s chin.
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Baby's bowel movements.
For the first few days after
delivery, the baby passes
meconium, a dark green, almost
black, substance. Meconium
accumulates in the baby's gut
during pregnancy. It is passed
during the first few days, and
by the third day, the bowel
movements start becoming
lighter, as more breastmilk is
taken. Usually by the fifth day,
the bowel movements have taken
on the appearance of the normal
breastmilk stool. The normal
breastmilk stool is pasty to
watery, mustard coloured, and
usually has little odour.
However, bowel movements may
vary considerably from this
description. They may be green
or orange, may contain curds or
mucus, or may resemble shaving
cream in consistency (from air
bubbles). The variations in
colour do not mean something is
wrong. A baby who is
breastfeeding only, and is
starting to have bowel movements
that are becoming lighter by day
3 of life, is doing well.
Without becoming obsessive about
it, monitoring the frequency and
quantity of bowel motions is one
of the best ways, next to
observing the baby’s drinking,
(see above, and
videos) of knowing if the
baby is getting enough milk.
After the first three to four
days, the baby should have
increasing bowel movements so
that by the end of the first
week he should be passing at
least two to three substantial
yellow stools each day. In
addition, many infants have a
stained diaper with almost each
feeding. A baby who is still
passing meconium on the fourth
or fifth day of life, should be
seen at the clinic the same day.
A baby who is passing only brown
bowel movements is probably not
getting enough, but this is not
very reliable.
Some breastfed babies, after the
first three to four weeks of
life, may suddenly change their
stool pattern from many each
day, to one every three days or
even less. Some babies have gone
as long as 15 days or more
without a bowel movement. As
long as the baby is otherwise
well, and the stool is the usual
pasty or soft, yellow movement,
this is not constipation and is
of no concern. No treatment is
necessary or desirable, because
no treatment is necessary or
desirable for something that is
normal.
Any baby between five and 21
days of age who does not pass at
least one substantial bowel
movement within a 24 hour period
should be seen at the
breastfeeding clinic the same
day. Generally, small,
infrequent bowel movements
during this time period mean
insufficient intake. There are
definitely some exceptions and
everything may be fine, but it
is better to check.
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Urination. With
six soaking wet (not just wet)
diapers in a 24 hours hour
period, after about 4-5 days of
life, you can be reasonably sure
that the baby is getting a lot
of milk (if he is breastfeeding
only). Unfortunately, the new
super dry "disposable" diapers
often do indeed feel dry even
when full of urine, but when
soaked with urine they are
heavy. It should be obvious that
this indication of milk intake
does not apply if you are giving
the baby extra water (which, in
any case, is unnecessary for
breastfed babies, and if given
by bottle, may interfere with
breastfeeding). The baby's urine
should be almost colourless
after the first few days, though
occasional darker urine is not
of concern.
During the first two to three
days of life, some babies pass
pink or red urine. This is not a
reason to panic and does not
mean the baby is dehydrated. No
one knows what it means, or even
if it is abnormal. It is
undoubtedly associated with the
lesser intake of the breastfed
baby compared with the bottle
fed baby during this time, but
the bottle feeding baby is not
the standard on which to judge
breastfeeding. However, the
appearance of this colour urine
should result in attention to
getting the baby well latched on
and making sure the baby is
drinking at the breast. During
the first few days of life, only
if the baby is well latched on
can he get his mother's milk.
Giving water by bottle or cup or
finger feeding at this point
does not fix the problem. It
only gets the baby out of
hospital with urine that is not
red. Fixing the latch and using
compression will usually fix the
problem (See Handout B: Protocol
to Increase Breastmilk Intake by
the Baby). If relatching and
breast compression do not result
in better intake, there are ways
of giving extra fluid without
giving a bottle directly
(handout #5 Using a Lactation
Aid). Limiting the duration or
frequency of feedings can also
contribute to decreased intake
of milk.
The following are NOT good ways of
judging
Your breasts do not feel
full. After the first few
days or weeks, it is usual for most
mothers not to feel full. Your body
adjusts to your baby's requirements.
This change may occur quite
suddenly. Some mothers breastfeeding
perfectly well never feel engorged
or full.
The baby sleeps through the
night. Not necessarily. A
baby who is sleeping through the
night at 10 days of age, for
example, may, in fact, not be
getting enough milk. A baby who is
too sleepy and has to be awakened
for feeds or who is "too good" may
not be getting enough milk. There
are many exceptions, but get help
quickly.
The baby cries after
feeding. Although the baby
may cry after feeding because of
hunger, there are also many other
reasons for crying. See also handout
#2 Colic in the Breastfeeding Baby.
Do not limit feeding times. “Finish”
the first side before offering the
other.
The baby feeds often and/or
for a long time. For one
mother feeding every three hours or
so may be often; for another, three
hours or so may be a long period
between feeds. For one, a feeding
that lasts for 30 minutes is a long
feeding; for another, it is a short
one. There are no rules how often or
for how long a baby should nurse. It
is not true that the baby gets 90%
of the feed in the first 10 minutes.
Let the baby determine his own
feeding schedule and things usually
come right, if the baby is suckling
and drinking at the breast and
having at least two to three
substantial yellow bowel movements
each day. Remember, a baby may be on
the breast for two hours, but if he
is actually feeding or drinking
(open wide—pause—close mouth type of
sucking) for only two minutes, he
will come off the breast hungry. If
the baby falls asleep quickly at the
breast, you can compress the breast
to continue the flow of milk
(handout #15, Breast
Compression). Contact the
breastfeeding clinic with any
concerns, but wait to start
supplementing. If supplementation is
truly necessary, there are ways of
supplementing which do not use an
artificial nipple (handout #5,
Using a Lactation Aid).
"I can express only half an
ounce of milk". This means
nothing and should not influence
you. Therefore, you should not pump
your breasts "just to know". Most
mothers have plenty of milk. The
problem usually is that the baby is
not getting the milk that is
available, either because he is
latched on poorly, or the suckle is
ineffective or both. These problems
can often be fixed easily. The baby
will take a bottle after feeding.
This does not necessarily mean that
the baby is still hungry. This is
not a good test, as bottles may
interfere with breastfeeding.
The
five week old is suddenly pulling
away from the breast but still seems
hungry. This does not mean your milk
has "dried up" or decreased. During
the first few weeks of life, babies
often fall asleep at the breast when
the flow of milk slows down even if
they have not had their fill. When
they are older (four to six weeks of
age), they no longer are content to
fall asleep, but rather start to
pull away or get upset. The milk
supply has not changed; the baby
has. Compress the breast (handout
#15, Breast Compression)
to increase flow.
Notes on scales and weights
-
differences from one
scale to another.
Weights have often been written
down wrong. A soaked cloth
diaper may weigh 250 grams (half
a pound) or more, so babies
should be weighed naked or with
a brand new dry diaper.
-
Many rules about weight
gain are taken from observations
of growth of formula feeding
babies. They do not
necessarily apply to
breastfeeding babies. A slow
start may be compensated for
later, by fixing the
breastfeeding. Growth charts are
guidelines only.
Handout #4. Is My Baby Getting
Enough? Revised January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. ©
2005
This handout may be copied and
distributed without further
permission, on the condition that it
is not used in any context in which
the WHO code on the marketing of
breastmilk substitutes is violated
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