I have a baby who is almost three weeks old. We were only breastfeeding the first week and she wasn't gaining the weight she needed so we had to supplement with formula. Here we are almost three weeks later and she is fighting me and screaming every time I try to breastfeed. I've been pumping and giving it to her in a bottle after breastfeeding (if she will) and then giving formula. I'm very close to giving up on breastfeeding and am thinking about switching to just pumping. Has anyone had experience or problems with this? I have a friend who did it and her milk supply dried up. I really want to nurse but it's just a constant battle that leaves both of us crying a lot.
Re: Does Exclusively Pumping Decrease Milk Supply?
I had the hardest time breastfeeding my daughter for many reasons. It was so important to me for her to have my milk, so when she was about 9 days old, I completely switched to exclusively pumping.
I am going on 4 months now of EP'ing: my supply is established and has been since about 12 weeks. I still pump anywhere from 40-50oz a day (my daughter drinks 32-36oz daily).
It DOES get easier, and I think it is totally worth the extra work!! I wanted to give up when I was about two weeks in and I am SO glad I didn't!
*EP tip that saved my life* leave your pumping parts (flanges,connectors, valves & membranes) all connected together after your first session of the day and place them in a ziploc bag and keep them in the fridge. You can use the whole set all day, as long as you keep putting it back in the bag then in the fridge!
You can always message me if you ever have any questions I might be able to help! I'm totally not a professional & definitely don't know it all, but I have done a ton of research and learned a lot through trial/error these last 17 weeks
p.s. Kudos to you mamas for trying everything you can!! Remeber no matter what you are not a failure. Whether your baby has breast milk, formula or both he/she will thrive, grow and develop all the same!
I would sleep when my daughter did, even if she had a 4-6hour stretch of sleep. Sleep affects your supply, so I figured it would help me more than anything - and it totally did.
Edit for autocorrect
I always pump for 5 minutes after the flow stops. Sometimes I get "spray" for 20 minutes so I pump longer to make sure they're empty. I also massage as I pump.
@mom2be2016 oh that's interesting, never heard that before. I heard about doing it from a woman who had said her LC recommended her doing that.
I've been doing it for at least two months and haven't had any issues either. To each their own though