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When Mommy's Sick
3 Steps to Easing Your Mind
By Lisa A. Goldstein
Motherhood – especially if it's your first time around – can be taxing. When you add a cold, flu or more serious illness to the equation, it can feel positively overwhelming. The good news is that it's always possible to breastfeed when sick, unless the mother is so ill that she is too weak or is in the hospital, says Angela Jacobi, RN, child nurse and certified lactation consultant.
Getting sick while nursing is an entirely different situation than for a bottle-feeding mother who is sick. If it's a cold or flu, the bottle-feeding mother can give her baby to someone else and go to bed. "The nursing mother will still need to empty her breasts, either by pump or Baby," Jacobi says. "She can't just 'bail out,' or she will run the risk of either becoming engorged or losing her milk. However, the literature on breastfeeding is very clear. The baby should still be breastfed or given expressed breast milk. Breast milk is a most robust food and is not easily contaminated or infected, even with mastitis."
"Any disruption in nursing can undermine the process – if the baby gets used to the bottle, [he or she] might eventually reject the mother's breast, and that would jeopardize all the continuing and future benefits of breastfeeding: optimum nutrition for the baby, passing benefits of the mother's immune system to the baby, and for the mother, natural child spacing and protection against breast cancer because of the suppression of estrogen and production of other hormones," Arnold says.
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