08.04 Breastfeeding

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Latching for Breastfeeding (Image)
Breastfeeding (Picmonic)
Breastfeeding Latch Score Cheatsheet (Cheat Sheet)

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Transcript

In this lesson I am going to explain breastfeeding and your role in helping parents be successful and educated.

Alright let’s start with just some basics. The first feeding should occur within the first hour after birth. So putting that baby skin to skin at delivery can help initiate this. It is your job to help this mom be successful with whatever her wishes for feeding her baby are. So what is the current recommendation? The American Academy of Pediatrics does recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life. So this means only breastmilk and no supplementation. Then slowly foods are introduced and at one year weaning can start if mom and baby wish to. The World Health Organization recommends breastfeeding up to 2 years of age or beyond. So this is not easy and breastfeeding is difficult to learn. It comes with practice. Every baby has to learn it and the mom has to learn it as well. Your job is to help and assist however you can. Moms are tired and babies scream and it's the middle of the night and they want to give up. It is not easy but your role is to be there and support them however they need.
Our assessment is going to include baby and mom. For the baby we will assess the stool. First it will be meconium which is a black tarry, sticky color. After that passes, a breastfed baby’s stool will transition and be seedy, yellow, watery and occur frequently. Breastmilk can act like a laxative. We will assess mom for breast engorgement. This will be uncomfortable and the breasts will get hard because they are full with milk. During the postpartum time frame something called mastitis might occur. This is a bacterial infection. A clogged duct causes milk to backup and bacteria grows. Assessment of this will be a high temperature, breast tenderness and redness at the infected site will occur. A clogged duct will just be a hard movable ball felt. You can see in this image the duct and this area just gets filled and clogged with milk.
Our management for this patient will be to promote the first feeding as soon as possible. This should occur within 1 hour of birth and putting the baby skin to skin will help initiate this. Breastfeeding is hard so we need to offer as much engorgement as we can. Breastfeeding moms need to increase their caloric intake. They can eat up to 500 additional calories daily. This is more of an increase than when they were pregnant! They also need to continue prenatal vitamin during breastfeeding and drink plenty of water. You need healthy nutrition and plenty of water on board for adequate milk production. Our biggest piece of management will be to assist with feedings. The best way is to always place the baby skin to skin. And in line with mom so tummy to mommy or belly to belly. The best position is the biological position where they are parallel on mom. So straight up and down. It helps keep them awake. Another common position is the cradle which is the newborn transversely and across the mom. The infant need to be aligned with nose to nipple. Then allow the infant to open mouth and get as much of the breast in the mouth all of areola. The suck reflex is in the back of the infant’s mouth so the bigger the mouthful the better the latch. You can see in the image how the areola is fulling in the mouth. The lips are flanged. This is a great latch. We need to let the infant dictate feeding. So feeding cues are rooting and sticking the tongue on. If the infant is awake he is hungry. If the baby is sleeping then the baby is full and content. When the infant is latched on we should see visual sucking occurring but never hear any sucking. This means it is not a good latch so the infant needs to be unlatched and removed. A bad latch never helps mom or baby. We need equal breast stimulation to promote adequate milk production so switching sides should occur with each feeding.
Let’s look at the LATCH score. This is used to determine how well the infant is doing and each is scored 0-2 points. L stands for the latch. Is the infant too sleepy and not latching which would be 0 points. ist here repeated attempts and we are having to do all the work and stimulate the infant, which would be a 1 or is the infant grasping the breast with a good latch and sucking properly which would be 2 points. A is for audible swallowing. None is 0, a few with stimulation is 1 and spontaneous is 2. T is type of nipple. Inverted is 0, flat is 1, and everted where it sticks out is 2. C is comfort. So for this is the mom engorged or having cracking or bleeding nipples which would be 0. If the breast is filling or has some blister or bruising this is 1 and soft nontender is a 2. H is the hold. If we have to fully assist they get a 0. If we do one side and the family does the other it is a 1 and if we do not assist at all it is a 2. This will be important to review for testing purposes.


Our education is going to be on how to use the breast pump so they are prepared when they need to use it. We are going to educate on how to latch the baby and be successful. Utilizing lactation consultants can be really helpful to reinforce this education and answer more in depth questions the mom has or for those babies that just won’t cooperate.

Our concepts are nutrition and human development because this is the food source and comfort because we have to help the mom with the comfort of the feeding.
Let’s review our key points to remember. Breastfeeding gives babies added antibody protection, reduces many health concerns for both mom and baby, and should be done exclusively for the first 6 months of life. This means only breast milk and no supplementation. Mom should increase calories by 500 a day for adequate production.


Make sure you check out the resources attached to this lesson and review the LATCH score. Now, go out and be your best selves today. And, as always, happy nursing.
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