I'm feeling disheartened- my little one only put on 35gm this week and should have put on over 100gm.
I'm so confused by all the advice Im reciving- every nurse says something different- I really do want to breast feed and I feel like I'm feeding her all the time. Still over the last two weeks she is almost back at her birth weight but since we have been home her weight is not increasing as it should- is this normal? should go seek out a lactation consultant or am I over reacting?
I really felt everything was going well- we are having 6 wet nappies and 6 dirty a day!! This all seems normal?
I was using nipple shields but I've stopped today. Will this help? Gahhh!! I'm so overwhelmed.
Re: Lack of weight gain breastfeeding
I think you can call la Leche league and speak to someone over the phone if I remember correctly.
best of luck
I had to start supplementing because I could tell my LO wasn't getting enough. I then had a lactation consultant come out to help me -(which helped with the actual feeding but also gave me some piece of mind.) if you are worried, then definitely get help. Stressing yourself won't help the situation any. (Which I have to remind myself every couple hours!)
TTC off and on 04/14
BFP 06/13/14 MC 06/15/14
BFP 12/14/14
1st Appt 01/13/2015
M/C 1/19/15 D&C 1/20/15
BFP 5/13/15
1st Appt 06/10/2015 Peanut has HB 150
A/S 09/02/15 It's a Girl!! Low placenta, but everything else great!
Also if this is any help - my baby cluster feeds - 5-7 minutes and falls asleep and then in 30 minutes will do 10 mins on the other side. Then she will sleep for 2 hrs and do it again. I was worried that she wasn't eating enough - but she gained a lb in a week so the dr said it was fine. So it seems not all feedings need to be long to be filling.
We're not talking about a malnourished preemie. We're talking about a healthy baby who has in just two weeks almost gone up to birth weight and is filling diapers.
Nipple shields, while they can be a blessing for some, can be a burden for others. Some babies find it harder to latch on them and to properly empty the breast, so if your baby is latching well without them it could definitely help.
If possible at all, don't hold your boob. You could block some ducts while doing it. And don't worry about the nose, as long as your hand is not holding baby's head (it should be supporting baby's ahoulderblades and neck) baby can move freely to free the nose or unlatch if needed. Obviously I'm not saying you shouldn't be careful about it, I'm just saying that people usually stress way too much about it.
And thank you for your post, @Grassieta! What you're saying makes perfect sense, but as a FTM it's easy to be overly critical of my actions. I just want my little lady to be as well off as I can make her!
Now I'm 39w5d and still nursing that baby who never averaged a weight gain of more than 90g/week, who only doubled her birth weight at her first birthday and who now at almost 3.5 years old is doing great, is super strong, active and well... still skinny! But it helps when she asks to be held.
Now I fear battling the same demons again with this little one. We'll see how it goes.