Her experience encompasses helping babies and mothers with a wide
variety of breastfeeding issues in the first days after birth through the first two years of life.
But, more importantly, the doctor can monitor your child closely to be sure he remains healthy and continues to gain weight while you're taking
care of your breastfeeding issues.
Normally I don't diagnose a
lot of breastfeeding issues because I feel like that's something that's tricky and also a little dicey to do when you're not in the same room as the persona with the problem.
And statements like «It's all in your mind» not only insult women whose problems were absolutely not imaginary, but reveal a lack of education on the
realities of breastfeeding issues.
Dr. Smillie speaks nationally and internationally about the clinical management of a wide
variety of breastfeeding issues, always stressing the role of the motherbaby as a single psychoneurobiological system, and emphasizing the innate instincts underlying both maternal and infant competence.
Although it might be inferred that confidence in addressing the needs of breastfeeding mothers translates into better clinical
management of breastfeeding issues, the number of residents in this study was too small to correlate the performance of individual residents in the clinical setting with their reported confidence level.
On the other hand, when a baby isn't latching on well, it can lead to a variety
of breastfeeding issues.
I'm not saying a breast pillow will solve
all of your breastfeeding issues, but they can help.
We'll also look at how using hands — the mother's hands, and sometimes the professional's — can aid in the prevention and treatment of a variety
of breastfeeding issues, including both rapid and slow milk production and plugged ducts, as well as help with feeding preemies, twins, etc., and describe several very different manual techniques for these different situations.
How lucky am I to have
all of our breastfeeding issues solved and corrected, how lucky am I to be able to fix boo - boos with some «milkies,» and how lucky am I to be able to experience this bond with my baby, which might even have made me less susceptible to postpartum depression?