Feeding On Demand Superior:
Short Breastfeeds 'Best For Baby'
Giving regular, short breastfeeds is more beneficial
than the "baby-led" method, a British study suggests.
Allowing a baby to choose when it feeds, and for how long, is
often recommended to new mothers.
A study of 63 mothers in Bradford found regular feeds of up
to 10 minutes on each breast led to increased weight gain and
a higher breastfeeding rate.
However, midwives said the method suggested in Archives of Disease
in Childhood would not apply to everyone.
The World Health Organization recommends that babies are exclusively
breastfed until they are six months old, but only around one in
four UK mothers follows that advice.
Feeding gaps
The researchers, led by Dr Anne Walshaw, a GP, had noticed poor
weight gain among breastfed babies after baby-led feeding became
more common.
They set up a study at one Bradford GP practice of 63 mothers
who exclusively breastfed their babies.
Half were told to feed as and when the baby wanted to, and to
offer the second breast only if the baby showed signs of still
being hungry.
The rest were advised to feed their babies for a maximum of
10 minutes on each breast around every three hours during the
day and, if necessary, at night.
The women in the second group were also told to leave at least
two hours between feeds.
Fewer than half of the babies in the baby-led group were still
breastfeeding after 12 weeks, compared with over three-quarters
of those whose mothers followed the traditional method.
In addition, baby-led feeding and feeding for more than 10 minutes
from the first breast, were both linked with poorer weight-gain
in the first six to eight weeks of life.
The researchers say baby-led feeding disrupts the body's system
for producing breast-milk.
A dose of a hormone called oxytocin is needed to trigger the
"let-down reflex", which causes milk to travel from cells in the
breast via ducts to the nipple.
But if babies stay on the breast for too long, this oxytocin
production is disrupted.
The researchers also said if babies are not put onto the second
breast, which will also be full of milk, at each feed, a protein
is produced which stops further milk being made, disrupting the
feeding process for hours and perhaps days.
'Baby will know'
Writing in Archives of Disease in Childhood, the team led by
Dr Walshaw, said: "Babies feeding from both breasts at each feed
receive more milk than babies feeding from one breast, and those
feeding for shorter average lengths experience increased weight
gain and other positive outcomes."
But Hilary English, a breastfeeding adviser for the National
Childbirth Trust, said it was possible that limiting feeds to
10 minutes per side would reduce milk production and babies would
be under-nourished.
"In general, baby-led feeding is best. A baby will know how
much he or she needs."
And Janet Fyla, professional policy adviser for the Royal College
of Midwives, said mothers should be guided by if their baby is
growing well.
"You cannot generalise. A baby who is getting enough milk will
feed for long enough and then come off," she said.
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