Showing posts with label breastmilk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breastmilk. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2009

Sun Angel Malunggay Tea

I found this on the website of Sun Angel Malunggay Herb Tea here on Multiply  (read the original post here).  I wanted to highlight, in particular, the text in orange.  It's something i really wanted to do when i gave birth to joachim last august in makati med.  but... the doctors and nurses didn't do it, despite reading my Birth Plan and verbally agreeing to it.  they did their usual thing of taking him and cleaning him up, etc., etc. then presented him to me for kiss-kiss and picture taking then brought him to the nursery.  i feel that they should have followed what i wanted to happen - it wasn't going to take too much time, anyway.  and i don't think that it would have harmed anyone if they had put joachim on my tummy (supported him) and then allowed him to nurse right away.

after being discharged and settling in at home, i saw pictures of joachim in the nursery (as i was in the recovery room, so this is at about an hour after being born) and because my mom and tabby were taking sequential shots, you could see joachim opening and closing his mouth.  it seemed like he was looking for me and wanted to nurse.  i felt so bad because i could have started giving him colostrum already.  instead, he was alone in his bassinet in the noisy nursery of makati med.  >sigh<

anyway, here's the post =) 

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The mother's 'breast friend' that comes in a tea bag

  During the recent World Breastfeeding Week in August, Filipino moms and moms-to-be were presented with staggering statistics and realities about breastfeeding.      

The most impactful message however was from recent studies that proved that first hour breastfeeding can mean life or death to a newborn, possibly saving more than a million babies worldwide if properly initiated. 

A  recent study published in Pediatrics in 2006 further showed that when infants are placed skin-to-skin on their mother’s abdomen and chest immediately after birth, they exhibit remarkable capabilities. They are alert, they can crawl, stimulated by mother’s gentle touch, across her abdomen, reaching her breast. This first gentle touch of a baby’s hand or head at the breast stimulates the release of maternal oxytocin, thus beginning both the flow of milk and enhancing the feelings of love for the baby. Then the baby smells, mouths and licks the mother’s nipple. Finally, he or she attaches to the breast and feeds. This sequence of events is important for the survival of newborn babies. 

The study also noted the following: (worldbreastfeeding.org)

*  That babies who do not start breastfeeding until after 24 hours of age are 2.5 times more likely to die than babies who started within the first hour of life, whether they were partially or exclusively breastfed.

* That 30% of babies in the study who were fed solids or other milk before one month of age were four times more likely to die than babies who were exclusively breastfed

* That 16% of newborn deaths could be prevented if newborns were breastfed exclusively from day one

* 22% of newborn deaths could be prevented if newborns initiated breastfeeding within one hour of birth.

'BAGGING' THE MIRACLE PLANT

In the Philippines, breastfeeding advocates join hands to promote breastfeeding,  creating awareness among mothers, pregnant women and other concerned agencies. In fact, breastfeeding stations have been opened in various malls even as the Philippines bagged the first Guinness World Record on Simultaneous Breastfeeding in Multiple Sites when 20,000 mothers in more than 400 sites were initiated to let Filipino mothers realize the all-important role of breastfeeding in the family and society.  

It is thus very important that mothers keep their breast milk both healthy and plenty.  

This is what inspired Imee Garcia, a mother of one and a staunch breastfeeding advocate, when she thought of helping nursing moms produce more milk through a most convenient way. 

 “I was having trouble while trying to breastfeed my first child, and my mom and other older relatives would always suggest to try boiling malunggay and take it as a soup. But I found that its taste was really bitter,'' Garcia recounts. 

For generations now, the malunggay vegetable has been relied upon by lactating moms to help them in breasteeding. Its high calcium content helps mothers produce more milk for infants.

Dr. Lydia M. Marero of the Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI) in her article ''Malunggay is Miracle Vegetable'' wrote that ''malunggay is one of the world's most useful plants.  It is used as food, effective flocculant or water treatment, antibiotic, source of oil, and coagulant for turbid waters.''

Loaded with nutrients. each ounce of malunggay contains seven times the Vitamin C found in oranges, four times the Vitamin A of carrots, three times the iron of spinach, four times as much calcium from milk and three times the potassium of bananas.

It is also called mother's best friend, and miracle vegetable by many who know malunggay's beneficial uses. Traditionally in the Philippines, lactating mothers are advised to eat malunggay incorporated in soups such as chicken tinola, mongo or halaan (clam) soup. But the nutrients malunggay offers are far from being maximized this way.

  Garcia and her mom also know all the benefits of malunggay too well. 

''But I also know that there is a better, more convenient and more pleasant way of taking malunggay everyday,'' she says. Like many modern mothers,  Garcia goes to work and her busy schedule does not allow her to always ingest the nutrients of malunggay through soups everyday.

Yet,  they won't do it the shortcut way, knowing how beneficial the nutrients of malunggay are. “We know that's why we did it the hard and slow way because we wanted to preserve all the goodness and the nutrients that the vegetable has to offer. No additives, caffeine and other preservatives were added in our tea,” she assures. 

Their determination has paid off, slowly but surely succeeding in ''tea bagging'' malunggay and all its goodness as she came up with Sun Angel Malunggay Herbal Tea, an instant yet effective response to busy breastfeeding women.  With the seal of the Bureau of Food and Drug (BFAD), this malunggay tea can be taken anytime and anywhere, precisely how Imee envisioned it to be.

''I know this will be most appreciated by mothers like me. But what is more important is that more and more women will be convinced that breastfeeding can now be more convenient, on top of the many benefits it gives our babies. There is no more excuse not to breastfeed - that we have no milk or that we are busy. We are gifted with technology to make things easier for all of us and we are making the most out of it, with our babies taking all the benefits,'' Garcia says.

(Sun Angel Malunggay Herb Tea is in Mercury Drug Stores. For inquiries call 776 3895 or 787 047, or check their site at malunggayherbtea.multiply.com and email malunggayherbtea@gmail.com.)

 


Monday, March 16, 2009

“My Milk Is All My Baby Needs” -Sherrie Mae Siy Ong

From Planet Noah's site (read the original post here).  It's a very inspiring read and one that I agree with wholeheartedly! There are so many things that go against breastfeeding and I sometimes feel like i'm fighting an uphill battle. It shouldn't be something that I should apologize for.  And then there's the (non-)support that I get from certain people who pay lip service to "yes, it's best for your baby. but nanny... it has been more than 7 months now.  don't you think it's time to stop?  pwede na, you already gave him lots of milk!  you can now give him formula."   who said that there's a time limit on this?  i'm so happy that i've lasted this long!  imagine, he's still fully breastfed at 7 months and 3 weeks?!  who would have thought?!  be inspired by her article, people... i know i am!  

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I'd like to share my friend Sherrie's inspiring piece on her breastfeeding experience. It's one of the entries that were chosen and posted in the lobby of Cardinal Santos Hospital as part of their celebration of Breastfeeding Month. I hope it will encourage more mothers to breastfeed despite the odds.

When a mom gives formula to her baby, no one gives it a second thought, but when a mom breastfeeds her baby, a slew of questions will immediately come her way: “How can you go back to work?”, “Why do you make it hard for yourself?”,°°“Why don’t you supplement with formula?”. And of course, that most often asked question which would strike at the hearts of even the most self-assured of nursing moms, “Do you have enough milk? Baka walang nasususo iyan.”

As all breastfeeding mothers know, the 2 most important truths in nursing are:°°1.All mothers have sufficient milk for their babies. 2. Breastfeeding works by supply and demand and the more we let our babies suckle, the more milk we produce.

Confident that I knew my basics, I got down to the actual business of breastfeeding which to my dismay, was even more demanding than being pregnant!°°

The first few times I experienced milk letdown, I felt a peculiar sensation of weakening°°as if the nutrients were being leached from my body. I persisted to discover still more things the breastfeeding books never mentioned (probably so as not to scare new mums!): sleepless nights especially the first couple of nights when I was desperate for sleep but could only nap for 15-30 minutes before my newborn would cry out again to be fed or cuddled.°°
 
And while the books did mention that breastfeeding would be every 2-3 hours, the reality is that in between burping, changing diapers, washing breastpumps, bathing baby, rocking baby, there is hardly time to do anything else besides breastfeeding. Forget about cooking or other household chores. Many times, I didn’t even have time to eat or take a shower!

I coped by multi-tasking. Checking my email while breastfeeding, bringing my son with me everywhere even to work°°(which is a major production entailing bringing a lot of baby gear heavier than baby himself) and pumping milk while working. In fact, pumping milk anywhere I could: at the back of a bus, in washrooms, in backrooms of exhibition halls. I even pumped while driving.

Even with all of this effort, people started to comment that my son was thin.°°While I knew that breastfed babies are normally leaner than formula-fed babies, I couldn’t help but worry myself.°°I went to a lactation consultant who commented, “Anong payat?”. He was healthy and thriving and that’s what matters, she said.

So here was another irony. It takes more effort to breastfeed, but the result is a leaner baby whereas if a mom formula feeds, she can just hand over the job to the yaya and people will look at the chubbier formula fed baby and nod in approval.

And then of course, there is work and the rest of your life.  In theory, pumping milk while being away from baby will maintain your milk supply, but as I discovered when I went on a 5 day business trip to Hongkong and a 3 day marriage retreat, not hearing baby’s cries made it so tempting to skip pumping sessions. In fact, even if baby just spent the day or night over at his grandparents’, out of fatigue, I would not pump according to schedule (which of course reduced my milk supply and I would have to relactate.)

So one thing I learned is that you can’t hurry nature along. The more you let your child suckle from you directly, the more milk you will produce for him. 

Why do I breastfeed despite all these challenges?  It is simply the best gift I can give my children.°°The gift of health. The gift of my time. There is°°no shortcut to breastfeeding, and while that is its biggest drawback, it is also its greatest virtue. Breastfeeding encouraged me to spend time with my babies and to slow down the pace of life from the hectic urban jungle to the natural rhythm of eating, sleeping and playing with baby. And isn’t that a more meaningful way of spending one’s time?

I must mention though that a good support system is critical in our breastfeeding journey. I was blessed to find support in family who assisted me in taking care of my son and in friends who shared their breastfeeding experiences with me. My friend Judy even lent me her breast pumps and would answer my breastfeeding questions even at 2 o clock in the morning.

Although breastfeeding asks of us a great deal of our time and patience, we must remember that this time to breastfeed our children will never come again. Never again will they turn to us for their complete physical and emotional nourishment. When I see my baby growing bigger each day, it is with a sense of awe knowing that my milk is all he needs to grow.

Breastfeeding may be tiring, monotonous, time consuming, but through it, I have experienced motherhood to its fullest. It has allowed me to be the best mom I can be by giving the best milk I can to my children.
 
Note: The writer breastfed her firstborn exclusively for 8 months until she got pregnant again. She is now breastfeeding her second born and has more realistic expectations of breastfeeding and resolves to minimize separations from her baby until he is weaned =).

Judy: I've posted this article on other mommy group sites with Sherrie's permission and have been getting overwhelming responses from like-minded moms. we love reading your breastfeeding stories and anecdotes =)

here are other readers' comments:
http://breastfeedingmums.multiply.com/journal/item/79
http://breastfeeding.multiply.com/journal/item/27
http://mommysrus.multiply.com/journal/item/211
http://workingmoms.multiply.com/journal/item/34/34

Sunday, December 14, 2008

what to do...

i've figured out why my milk supply dipped... it was because i kept forgetting to take the motilium!  that's one of the side effects when you stop taking it - your milk supply dips...  it took a while for me to figure out what the problem was, but when i did, i became more conscious of taking motilium and i'm taking natalac twice a day na.  i had stopped taking it because i thought that the motilium would suffice...

my guess is that it's like this:  motilium will facilitate multiple let downs and natalac will help with producing the milk.  am i making sense?  so now, i'm taking 2 natalacs 2x a day and 1 motilium 3x a day.   and it's working!  i'm happy to say that my milk supply is back to normal

but now... i need to have a ct urogram for my kidneys. (i have kidney stones.)  but they'll be giving me something via iv that may not be safe for lactating mothers.  their protocol is to tell the mother to stop breastfeeding for 2-3 days.  so... i refused to have it done.  but my urologist said that he really needs that test done.  so he suggested i just pump and store milk (enough for 3 days) and then have the test done and then feed joachim via bottle (expressed breastmilk) for 3 days while i pump and throw away the contaminated milk. then i can go back to feeding him directly. 

BUT... i'm not sure that that's a good idea for me.  i feel like my body will give up making milk if i'm not feeding him directly.  it doesn't matter how great or efficient your breast pump is.  it's still no match for your baby drinking directly from you.

so... i'm torn.  i know i have to take care of myself (by getting my kidneys fixed) and i have to be ok so that i can take care of my family, but at the same time, if i do that, i'll be compromising my providing milk for joachim.  what to do?  what to do? 

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

supply and demand

i remember that i breastfed micael purely for 4 months and then had to supplement because my milk supply was dwindling.  with the twins, i lasted for 2 months of pure breastmilk before i had to supplement.  i know that breastmilk is all about supply and demand - for as long as your baby demands, your body should supply the milk... and i was trying to figure out why my milk supply ran low. 

joachim is almost 4 months.  at this point, he's sleeping for longer periods of time.  at least 3 hours. and this is adversely affecting my milk supply.  i'm taking natalac and motilium, lots of buko juice, squash soup and other soups... but i feel like my supply is, once again, dwindling.  i'm fighting it, but honestly, i think that this is one battle i'm going to lose.  i'm so sad... 

i can't naman pump in between feedings because it's an alanganin time interval.  it's happened where i pump just to keep up the supply and then he got hungry 30-45 minutes after that.  and it was hard because my milk didn't let down right away (because i had super emptied both sides!) and he was screaming... poor kimi... and only after a while did it let down.  after that, i've been hesitant about pumping in between feedings. i don't want to have him bitin again.

if you know of any suggestions to help me with my milk supply, please let me know!  like i said, i'm fighting the fact that i feel like my milk supply is going down...

Sunday, November 23, 2008

breastmilk jaundice (another repost)

Here's another repost - this time from Jen Tan of next9 and Mom Exchange.  read her original post here.  it's about how her baby was really dark and/or yellow. he had breastmilk jaundice.  what's that?  well, read on and find out =)  thinking back,  all my boys (including joachim) were dark and then only turned white after a few months... i was able to breastfeed all throughout the "darkness".

i don't think it occurred to the pedia or to anyone else that they had breastmilk jaundice... in any case, the kids are fine =)  ate says that my babies are born dark and then lighten over time, but looking at the pictures, i realize it's not the case.  my boys are born white, then they darken until they're almost orange or dark brown.  after a few months, they lighten again.  it's pretty cool, actually... the color was how i differentiated gabe from rafa when they were born (aside from size).  rafa was darker - maybe because he was bigger than gabe.  anyway, here's her post =)



Well, when Kevin was born, he was the same.

He was dark, because of jaundice, his pediatrician said. She said I could give him water or --- just "wait it out" as it'll fade in time.

As a peer counselor of LATCH, I've received lots of inquiries regarding jaundice. How some pediatricians have recommended that the mom stop breastfeeding while the baby is jaundiced or to offer water. For those of you who are wondering, this is why babies are jaundiced:

"The newborn baby, however, often becomes jaundiced during the first few days because the liver enzyme that metabolizes bilirubin is relatively immature. Furthermore, newborn babies have more red blood cells than adults, and thus more are breaking down at any one time. If the baby is premature, or stressed from a difficult birth, or the infant of a diabetic mother, or more than the usual number of red blood cells are breaking down (as can happen in blood incompatibility), the level of bilirubin in the blood may rise higher than usual levels." (quoted from http://www.bflrc.com/newman/breastfeeding/jaundice.htm)

And it seems, there really is "breastmilk jaundice" -

"There is a condition commonly called breastmilk jaundice. No one knows what the cause of breastmilk jaundice is. In order to make this diagnosis, the baby should be at least a week old, though interestingly, many of the babies with breastmilk jaundice also have had exaggerated physiologic jaundice. The baby should be gaining well, with breastfeeding alone, having lots of bowel movements, passing plentiful, clear urine and be generally well. In such a setting, the baby has what some call breastmilk jaundice, though, on occasion, infections of the urine or an under functioning of the baby's thyroid gland, as well as a few other even rarer illnesses may cause the same picture. Breastmilk jaundice peaks at 10-21 days, but may last for two or three months. Breastmilk jaundice is normal. Rarely, if ever, does breastfeeding need to be discontinued even for a short time. Only very occasionally is any treatment, such as phototherapy, necessary. There is not one bit of evidence that this jaundice causes any problem at all for the baby. Breastfeeding should not be discontinued "in order to make a diagnosis".

If the baby is truly doing well on breast only, there is no reason, none, to stop breastfeeding or supplement with a lactation aid, for that matter. The notion that there is something wrong with the baby being jaundiced comes from the assumption that the formula feeding baby is the standard by which we should determine how the breastfed baby should be. This manner of thinking, almost universal amongst health professionals, truly turns logic upside down.

Thus, the formula feeding baby is rarely jaundiced after the first week of life, and when he is, there is usually something wrong. Therefore, the baby with so called breastmilk jaundice is a concern and "something must be done". However, in our experience, most exclusively breastfed babies who are perfectly healthy and gaining weight well are still jaundiced at five to six weeks of life and even later. The question, in fact, should be whether or not it is normal not to be jaundiced and is this absence of jaundice something we should worry about? Do not stop breastfeeding for "breastmilk" jaundice." (quoted from BFLRC.com).

Anyway, just to prove to you how my Biolink baby looked and how his progression was from "dark" to "light", click here for the pictures.