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Archive for July 2011

Pumping Moms Face Risks & We Needs to Take Action Now

The name of a recent study published in a scientific journal says it all: The Quiet Revolution: Breastfeeding transformed with the use of breast pumps. There’s no question that more babies get breast milk thanks to the more prevalent use of breast pumps, and that’s a good thing for the most part.

But Kathleen Rasmussen, co-author of the study and a professor of nutritional science at Cornell University, wants to add that with the advantages comes the risk of issues from pumping, and she wants scientists to have a chance to investigate those issues.

 

Read rest of article: The Stir

 

July Minutes Posted

July meeting minutes have been posted.  Go here to read–http://www.nctba.org/meeting/minutes

 

Next meeting: August 2, 2011 at 1 PM in the WakeMed Andrews Conference Center in Raleigh

 

 

Is America Ready for Breast Milk Baby?

 

Debate about a toy doll is brewing as its maker, a Spanish company called Berjuan Toys, prepares to start marketing the Breast Milk Baby in the U.S.

Designed for children 2 and older, the interactive doll simulates breast-feeding. It comes with a special halter top for the child to wear, featuring two flowers in the chest area that represent nipples. When Breast Milk Baby comes in close proximity with the flowers, it makes a suckling sound as though imitating a nursing infant. The doll also cries when it’s time to eat and burps after the meal.

The doll, known as Bebe Gloton in Europe, could be available in the U.S. soon if things go well for Berjuan Toys at a Las Vegas trade show next week.

World Breastfeeding Week 2011

  • Talk to me! Breastfeeding – a 3D Experience

    WABA is pleased to announce the World Breastfeeding Week theme for 2011 focusing on engaging and mobilising youth intergenerational work with the catchy slogan of:

    “Talk to me! Breastfeeding – a 3D Experience”.
    The theme deals with communication at various levels and between various sectors.

  • From 1-7 August 2011, the World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action (WABA), and breastfeeding
    advocates in more than 170 countries worldwide will be celebrating World Breastfeeding Week (WBW)
    for the 19th year with the theme “Talk to Me! Breastfeeding – a 3D Experience”.
  • Why 3D?

    When we look at breastfeeding support, we tend to see it in two-dimensions: time (from pre-pregnancy to weaning) and place (the home, community, health care system, etc). But neither has much impact without a THIRD dimension – communication!

    Communication is an essential part of protecting, promoting and supporting breastfeeding. We live in a world where individuals and global communities connect across small and great distances at an instant’s notice. New lines of communication are being created every day, and we have the ability to use these information channels to broaden our horizons and spread breastfeeding information beyond our immediate time and place to activate important dialogue.

    This third dimension includes cross-generation, cross-sector, cross-gender, and cross-culture communication and encourages the sharing of knowledge and experience, thus enabling wider outreach.

 

Check out these websites concerning World Breastfeeding Week
http://worldbreastfeedingweek.org/

https://www.facebook.com/pages/World-Breastfeeding-Week-2011/166402313405406?sk=wall

http://www.lllusa.org/wbw/

http://www.waba.org.my/

http://www.bakersfieldmom.com/2011/07/world-breastfeeding-week-2011/

http://www.ilca.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=3306

If a Military Mom Can Ship Breast Milk Home From Afghanistan, You Can Pump Too

Robyn Roche-Paull is a serious badass. That doesn’t sound like something you say about a lactation consultant, those gentle creatures encouraging calm and kvelling about endorphins, but Roche-Paull isn’t your average LC. She’s a veteran of the U.S. Navy — where she was an aircraft mechanic — and breastfed her son while on active duty.

She’s also the author of Breastfeeding in Combat Boots, a book intended for military moms who want information and support for their own breastfeeding efforts. If her tips help moms figure out how to breastfeed in combat zones and on military planes (like the mom to the left), surely they can be of use to any working mom.

 

Read rest of this great article-The Stir

 

Research Mailing from the Baby Friendly Initiative

 

 

 

 

 

 

Baby Friendly Initiative Research News

 

 

Health Professionals | Parents | News and Research | Resources | About us

 

Breastfeeding reduces risk of developing asthma-related symptoms

This study, of a cohort of 5,358 children, examined the associations of breastfeeding duration and exclusiveness with the risks of asthma-related symptoms in preschool children, and to explore whether these associations are explained by atopic or infectious mechanisms.

Compared to children who were breastfed for 6 months, those who were never breastfed had overall increased risks of wheezing, shortness of breath, dry cough and persistent phlegm during the first four years (Odds ratios 1.44 (95% Confidence Interval: 1.24, 1.66), 1.26 (1.07, 1.48), 1.25 (1.08, 1.44) and 1.57 (1.29, 1.91), respectively). Similar associations were observed for exclusive breastfeeding.

Shorter duration and non-exclusivity of breastfeeding were associated with increased risks of asthma-related symptoms in preschool children.

Duration and exclusiveness of breastfeeding and childhood asthma-related symptoms. AMM Sonnenschein-van der Voort, V.V.W. Jaddoe, RJP van der Valk, SP Willemsen, A Hofman, HA Moll, JC de Jongste, and L Duijts. Eur. Respir. J. published 20 July 2011, 10.1183/09031936.00178110

More research on breastfeeding and asthma

Scholtens S, Wijga AH, Kerkhof M et al (2009) Breastfeeding, parental allergy and asthma in children followed for 8 years. The PIAMA birth cohort study Thorax;64:604-609; doi:10.1136/thx.2007.094938

WH Oddy, JL Sherriff, NH de Klerk, GE Kendall, PD Sly, LJ Beilin, KB Blake, LI Landau, and FJ Stanley. The relation of breastfeeding and body mass index to asthma and atopy in children: a prospective cohort study to age 6 years. Am J Public Health, 2004; 94: 1531-7

Frenotomy for infants with tongue tie improves breastfeeding ability and maternal nipple pain

The purpose of this 12-month study was to determine whether frenotomy for infants with ankyloglossia (tongue tie) improved maternal nipple pain and ability to breastfeed. A secondary objective was to determine whether frenotomy improved the length of breastfeeding.

Neonates who had difficulty breastfeeding and significant ankyloglossia were enrolled in this randomised, single-blinded, controlled trial and assigned to either a frenotomy (30 infants) or a sham procedure (28 infants). Breastfeeding was assessed by a pre-intervention and post-intervention nipple-pain scale and the Infant Breastfeeding Assessment Tool. The same tools were used at the 2-week follow-up and regularly scheduled follow-ups over a 1-year period. The infants in the sham group were given a frenotomy before or at the 2-week follow-up if it was desired.

Both groups demonstrated statistically significantly decreased pain scores after the intervention. The frenotomy group improved significantly more than the sham group (P < .001). Breastfeeding scores significantly improved in the frenotomy group (P = .029) without a significant change in the control group. All but 1 parent in the sham group elected to have the procedure performed when their infant reached 2 weeks of age, which prevented additional comparisons between the 2 groups.

The authors conclude that when frenotomy is performed for clinically significant ankyloglossia, there is a clear and immediate improvement in reported maternal nipple pain and infant breastfeeding scores. They recommend additional research should be done to determine the optimal timing of frenotomy and the ideal screening tool to detect significant ankyloglossia.

Efficacy of Neonatal Release of Ankyloglossia: A Randomized Trial. Melissa Buryk, David Bloom, and Timothy Shope. Pediatrics. published 18 July 2011, 10.1542/peds.2011-0077

More research on tongue tie

Hogan M, Westcott C and Griffiths M (2005). Randomized, controlled trial of division of tongue-tie in infants with feeding problems. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health 41: 246. 1

Griffiths DM (2004). Do tongue ties affect breastfeeding? J Hum Lact 20: 409-14.

 

Children’s Famine in Somalia

The United Nations has formally declared a famine in parts of southern Somalia, where more than 250 children are dying every day.

Donate now to save lives

 

Baby Friendly Annual Conference – Last chance to book at discounted prices

The 2011 Baby Friendly Initiative Annual Conference takes place on 24-25 November 2011. Book before 31 July to take advantage of discounted rates.

Click here to find out more and book your place.

 

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Art of Breastfeeding Conference – Now Accepting Registrations!

 

 

 

 

 

Now Accepting Registrations!!

To register for the 21st Annual Art of Breastfeeding Conference: https://www.wakeahec.org/CourseCatalog/CASCE_courseinfo.asp?cr=33175
or copy and paste this link into your web browser.

To register for the Pre-Conference – Breastfeeding Support 101: https://www.wakeahec.org/CourseCatalog/CASCE_courseinfo.asp?cr=34406
or copy and past this link into your web browser.

 


   

 

 

 


5 Things Breastfeeding Moms Don’t Really Need

If you’ve walked into the baby gear section of store, you already know there is a lot to choose from. So many things that promise you will need them, so many that swear that they will make your life so much easier. Standing in a box store holding the little UPC gun to make your baby registry, or an empty shopping cart ready to fill with new baby gear can feel pretty overwhelming as you try to decide what is a waste of money, and what might actually make a difference in your life.

As breastfeeding is becoming more of a niche market, as we push the ability to be visible rather than ‘out of sight, out of mind’, companies meet that by creating many products geared specifically at nursing moms as well.

So what do you need? Or more specifically, what do you really not need.

 

Read the list here-Best For Babes

 

Educational Conference In Charlotte

Looking to learn more about breastmilk and it’s components as well as methods to increase a premature infant’s growth potential while receiving maternal breastmilk? Read More→

Restaurant Encourages Nurse-In After Staff Shunned Mom for Breastfeeding

 

At a Ruby Tuesday restaurant in LaVale, Maryland, a mother was enjoying lunch with friends when her baby started to fuss. She began to nurse the baby (as within her legal rights) when an elderly couple nearby took it upon themselves to complain, loudly, and ask to be moved.

 

Read rest of the article-The Stir