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BREASTFEEDING YOUR HOSPITALIZED BABY
The benefits of breastfeeding are numerous, but it may
be even more important if a baby is premature or needs special care.
- The nutrients in human milk are easier on babies’ digestive
systems.
- The milk that comes from each baby’s own mother offers
specific protection from infection and helps the baby build immunity.
- Premature babies fed mother’s own milk have fewer cases
of sepsis, an infection in the blood stream, and of necrotizing enterocolitis, an
inflammatory disease of the intestines. As a result they tend to be discharged from
the hospital sooner.
Breastfeeding your baby is a special gift only you can give.
Often, being able to take a part in your baby’s care helps you feel less helpless
when your baby is hospitalized.
The Mother’s Milk Bank is a state-of-the-art
collection, labeling, refrigeration and dispensing center that stores and prepares
deposited breast milk to feed infants who are patients in
Texas Children's Newborn Center nurseries.
Because you have delivered your baby, special milk-making hormones are working to
produce milk in your breasts. Since your baby cannot remove the milk from the breast
at this time, you will have to express or pump your breasts to stimulate your milk
production.
Skin-to-skin contact, also called kangaroo care, refers to a special way to hold
your baby. You hold your baby upright against your bare chest, nestled between your
breasts. Your baby is dressed in a diaper.
Your baby is comforted by your warmth, smell and familiar heartbeat. Studies have
even shown that holding your baby skin-to-skin keeps them warmer and better regulates
their breathing and heart rate compared to holding the baby in blankets.
When a mother has skin-to-skin contact with her baby, it causes her body to release
the hormone oxytocin. This hormone creates a feeling of nurturing calm and helps
stimulate milk production.
Skin-to-skin contact helps you and your baby bond. Fathers who hold their babies
this way often feel more connected too.
Whenever possible, touch your baby and talk to him. Feed and change him.
My baby is not strong enough to breastfeed on his own.
Can he still be fed my breast milk?
If your baby is not yet strong enough to try to breastfeed:
- Begin to pump as soon after the birth as you are able.
- Pump every two to three hours, about the same interval
as your baby would nurse.
- Use a full-size, hospital-grade pump, with a double-pump
kit.
- Save your colostrum, the first milk, for your baby's first
feeding.
If your baby can come out of the isolette, but is not strong
enough to nurse:
- Hold him skin-to-skin.
- Pump breast milk to be fed to your baby by other methods.
If your baby is strong enough to breastfeed:
- Remember it takes time and patience.
- Try the cross cradle
hold for a better view of your baby and to control his head.
- Pump between feedings to avoid engorgement and maintain
your milk supply.
All references to medications, conditions
and/or treatments, whether specifically or generically, are for informational purposes
only and are not endorsements, recommendations or approvals by Texas Children's
Hospital. Nothing herein is intended, or should be considered, medical advice or
a medical recommendation and should not be used to make a diagnosis or to replace
or overrule a qualified health care provider's judgment. All medical advice and
medical information concerning personal health conditions, status and treatments
should be obtained directly from a licensed physician or other appropriate healthcare
professional.
 
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