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Home > Is This Safe When Breastfeeding? > Illness/Surgery My baby is sick - should I continue to breastfeed?By Kelly Bonyata, IBCLC Absolutely! Anytime a sick baby is able to take anything by mouth, it should be his mother's milk. Mom's milk provides antibodies specifically tailored to fight baby's illness, and is quickly and easily digested. Temporary weaning, besides depriving baby of antibodies to fight the illness and the most easily digestible food source available, can make life miserable for both mother and baby. Nursing is extremely comforting to an ill baby and a major part of the healing process. Mom would have to pump to maintain milk supply and then there would still be some risk that supply would drop somewhat. Not pumping would put mom at risk for breast infection and extreme discomfort.
If baby has a cold and is congested, it can make breastfeeding difficult. However, it is almost always easier for a sick baby to nurse than to take a bottle. If your baby has a stuffy nose and is having a hard time breathing and nursing at the same time, try the following:
Sometimes moms are advised to limit or discontinue breastfeeding because milk increases mucus production. This is not good advice for two reasons:
Some babies may refuse to nurse when sick (particularly if something like a sore throat or pressure from an ear infection makes nursing painful for baby). If this happens, try different nursing positions - particularly those where baby is upright - and keep offering to nurse at least every hour or so. See also: What to do about a nursing strike. Rest assured that your baby will return to nursing when he feels better. Here are some things to try if baby is too uncomfortable to nurse:
Another time when moms can be unsure about whether to continue nursing is when baby has diarrhea or is vomiting. Frequent and loose stools in a breastfed baby is not necessarily diarrhea. Here is more information on normal stooling patterns for breastfed babies: What Are Baby's Stools Supposed to Look Like? Diarrhea in a breastfed baby is diagnosed when a baby has 12-16 stools per day (or more often than the baby's regular stool frequency), watery stools, and an offensive odor to the stools. Just one of these symptoms does not in itself mean the baby has diarrhea. The current recommendations when vomiting or diarrhea is present in the breastfed child are as follows:
The use of an oral rehydration therapy such as Pedialyte is a sound
recommendation for a formula-fed infant who is vomiting or who has
diarrhea, but using this in place of breastmilk offers no benefit
to the breastfed baby. Human milk is a natural fluid, unlike formula
and other milk products, that again is easily and rapidly digested.
Babies who are allowed to continue breastfeeding through an illness such as this are less likely to become dehydrated than those who are taken off the breast. Continued nursing also provides your child with precious antibodies that will prevent the illness from worsening and speed healing. Nursing is also very comforting to your child, which is healing in itself. Breastfed babies sometimes need oral rehydration therapy (Pedialyte, etc), though far less often than artificially fed infants. The World Health Organization recommends continuing to breastfeed during and after oral rehydration therapy. Research shows that babies lose more weight and actually have more stools during diarrhea when they are deprived of breastmilk. Sometimes moms are recommended to withhold breastmilk "because
it is a dairy product." Breastmilk is NOT considered a dairy
or milk product (mom is not a cow!). Anytime there is diarrhea (in adults as well as babies) it can take a while for the bowel to heal and the stools to get back to normal. So even if you identify the problem and take corrective action, you may not see favorable results for a few weeks. This is because if the bowel gets irritated it is harder for the bowel to digest lactose - the undigested lactose then actually creates more irritation and runny stools... it can be tough to turn around at times. There is usually an inflammatory response with diarrhea - that is the part that takes time to heal. When the cause of the problem is removed (when baby recovers from the illness), the gut will heal even if the baby is still fed breastmilk. More here on secondary lactose intolerance.
When baby is sick, moms are sometimes told to discontinue or restrict breastfeeding and substitute an oral rehydration therapy such as Pedialyte. This outdated practice has been shown to offer no benefits to the breastfed baby, and can even delay healing. Your milk has four things that your baby needs even more than usual when he's sick:
See the section above for more information on the use of Pedialyte in breastfed babies - Breastfed babies sometimes do need oral rehydration therapy (Pedialyte, etc), though far less often than artificially fed infants. The World Health Organization recommends continuing to breastfeed during and after oral rehydration therapy.
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10/10/2005
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ReferencesBhattacharya SK, et al. Risk factors for development of dehydration in young children with acute watery diarrhoea: a case-control study. Acta Paediatr 1995 Feb;84(2):160-4. Brown, K "Dietary Management of acute childhood diarrhea: optimal timing of feeding and appropriate use of milks and mixed diets." J. of Ped. 1991;118(4) pt 2: S92. Clemens, J. et al. Discontinuation of bf during episodes of diarrhoea in rural Bangladesh children. Trans Royal Soc Trop Med Hygiene 1998; 82:779. Ewer, A. et al. Gastric emptying in preterm infants. Arch Dis Child 1994; 71: F24-F27. Faruque AS, Mahalanabis D, Islam A, Hoque SS, Hasnat A. Breast feeding and oral rehydration at home during diarrhoea to prevent dehydration. Arch Dis Child 1992 Aug;67(8):1027-9. "...withdrawal of breast feeding during diarrhoea was associated with a five times higher risk of dehydration compared with continuation of breast feeding during diarrhoea at home." Huffman SL, Combest C. Role of breast-feeding in the prevention and treatment of diarrhoea. J Diarrhoeal Dis Res 1990 Sep; 8(3):68-81. Khin MU, Nyunt-Nyunt W, Myokhin AJ, et al. Effect of clinical outcome of breast feeding during acute diarrhoea. Br Med J. 1985;290:587-589. Lawrence R. Breastfeeding: A Guide for the Medical Profession, 4th ed. St. Louis: Mosby, 1994, pp. 371, 438, 459-60. Mahalanabis D, et al. Prognostic indicators and risk factors for increased duration of acute diarrhoea and for persistent diarrhoea in children. Int J Epidemiol 1991; 20: 1064. Mauer et al. "American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Nutrition: Use of ORT and Post-treatment feeding following enteritis in children in a developed country. Pediatrics 1985; 75: 359. Mohrbacher, N. and Stock, J. The Breastfeeding Answer Book, Revised ed. Schaumburg, Illinois: La Leche League International, 1997, pp. 280-283. Riordan J and Auerbach K. Breastfeeding and Human Lactation, 2nd ed. Boston and London: Jones and Bartlett, 1999, pp. 637-642. Wan C, Phillips MR, Dibley MJ, Liu Z. Randomised trial of different rates of feeding in acute diarrhoea. Arch Dis Child 1999 Dec; 81(6):487-91. World Health Organization. The Treatment of Diarrhoea. A manual for physicians and other senior health workers. WHO/CDR/95.3 (10/95). Division of Diarrhoeal and Acute Respiratory Disease Control. |
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