Protocol to Increase Intake of Breastmilk by the Baby ("Not Enough Milk")
Here is the way I suggest mothers proceed for "insufficient milk supply" (actually, most mothers have lots, but the problem is that the baby is not getting the milk that is available).
- Get the best latch possible.
This needs to be shown by someone who knows what they are doing. Anyone can
look at the baby at the breast and say the latch is good. The accompanying
diagram, or the one available at the website below shows how to get a good
latch. If a mother has plenty of milk, the latch does not have to be perfect.
But, if the milk supply is decreased, the baby will get more milk if he is
latched on better. Get good "hands on" help.
- Know how to know the
baby is getting milk. When a baby is getting milk (he is not getting milk
just because he has the breast in his mouth and is making sucking movements),
you will see a pause at the point of his chin after he opens to the maximum
and before he closes his mouth, so that one suck is (open mouth wide-->pause-->close
mouth). If you wish to demonstrate this to yourself, put your index or other
finger in your mouth and suck as if you were sucking on a straw. As you draw
in, your chin drops and stays down as long as you are drawing in. When you
stop drawing in, your chin comes back up. This pause that is visible at the
baby's chin represents a mouthful of milk when the baby does it at the breast.
The longer the pause, the more the baby got. Once you know about the pause
you can cut through so much of the nonsense breastfeeding mothers are being
told-such as "Feed the baby twenty minutes on each side." A baby
who does this type of sucking (with the pause) for twenty minutes straight
might not even take the second side. A baby who nibbles (doesn't drink) for
20 hours will come off the breast hungry.
- Once the baby is no longer
drinking on his own, use compression to increase flow to the baby. Compression
can be particularly helpful, but don't forget trying to get the best latch
possible first. Babies tend to pull at the breast when the flow of milk is
slow, so it is useful to know how to know the baby is actually getting milk
and not just sucking without getting milk. When the baby no longer seems to
be getting milk, and is sucking without getting milk, this is when to start
compression, while the baby sucks, but does not drink. Keep the baby on the
first breast until he doesn't drink even with compression. See Handout #15:
Breast Compression.
- When the baby no longer
drinks even with compression, switch sides and repeat the process. Keep going
back and forth as long as the baby gets reasonable amounts of milk at the
breast.
- Try fenugreek and blessed
thistle. These two herbs seem to increase milk supply and increase rate of
milk flow. There is more information on the Handout #24: Miscellaneous
Treatments.
- In the evening when babies
often want to be at the breast for long periods, get help to position the
baby so that you can feed lying down. Let the baby nurse and maybe you will
fall asleep. Or rent videos and let the baby nurse while you watch.
- It is not always easy
to decide if a baby needs supplementation. Sometimes more rapid growth is
necessary, and it may not be possible without supplementation. If possible
get banked breastmilk to use as a supplement if you can. If not available,
formula may be necessary. However, sometimes slow but steady growth is acceptable.
The main reason to worry about growth is that good growth is one sign of good
health. A baby who grows well is usually in good health, but this is not necessarily
so. Neither is a baby who grows slowly in poor health, but physicians worry
about a baby who is growing more slowly than average. Growth charts are frequently
interpreted poorly. A baby who follows the 10th percentile line is growing
as he should be. Too many people, including physicians, believe that only
babies on the 50th percentile or higher are growing normally. Not true. Growth
charts were developed on information based on information gathered about normal
babies. Somebody has got to be smaller than 90% of all other babies. Somebody
normal.
- If it is decided to
supplement, the best way is at the breast with a lactation aid. Introduce
the supplement with a nursing supplementer (lactation aid), not bottle, syringe,
cup or finger feeding. See the handout on Lactation Aid.
Supplement only after steps 3 and 4 above and the baby has nursed on at least
both sides. A baby learns to breastfeed by breastfeeding, and there is more
to breastfeeding than the breastmilk. Keep the baby at the breast! Why is
it better to use the lactation aid?
- babies learn to breastfeed by breastfeeding
- mothers learn to breastfeed by breastfeeding
- the baby continues to get your milk
- the baby won't reject the breast
- there is more to
breastfeeding than the breastmilk
- If the baby is older
than 3 or 4 months, and supplementation appears to be necessary, formula is
not necessary and extra calories can be given to the baby as solid foods.
First solids may include: mashed banana, mashed avocado, mashed potato or
sweet potato, infant cereals, as much as the baby will take, and after the
baby has nursed, if he is still hungry. Even at this age giving bottles when
the baby is not getting much from the breast will often result in breast rejection.
If you must give formula, mix it with the baby's solids. Giving solids at
3 or 4 months if everything is going well is not recommended, and even if
the weight gain is slow, there are several ways of getting the baby more breastmilk
that can be tried before adding solids. Solids should normally be started
when the baby is showing interest in eating solids (usually around 5 or 6
months of age).
- Domperidone is a possibility.
It is not a panacea (a magic bullet). Check the handout on Domperidone.
Jack Newman,
MD, FRCPC. © 2003
Revised: December 22, 2002
This handout may be copied and distributed without further permission, on the condition that it is not used in any context in which the WHO code on the marketing of breastmilk substitutes is violated.







