Not exact matches
During a morning examination without family present, one of the
nurses gave Grayson sugar
water.
My son is now going on 15 months and I'm still BF.He still feeds quite a few times
during the day and also night.He asks when he wants to feed, he comes near me and whispers «teta», so cute.He never liked bottles and will only drink
water in hhis sippy cup.Also he won't sleep without being nursed.He has seven teeth and 4 molars already but rarely bites me.Now that he's walking hhe gets distracted playing and hopefully he'll sometime want to stop
nursing, but for now I'll continue.
Nursing women tend to be thirstier anyway, especially
during feeding sessions, because part of their
water consumption goes directly to milk production.
My
waters broke spontaneously
during a blood pressure check by a friendly
nurse, I was so excited, she smiled & smiled as I asked her to confirm the
waters were clear.
You can support her by listening, making sure she has snacks and
water, and getting her a good book to read
during those long
nursing sessions.
Do not breastfeed
during the night substitute with a warm bottle or warm
water in a sippy cup, every night make his little mattress further from your bed and each night cut his
nursing down and start laying him on his mattress awake so he can fall asleep himself.
Keep a
water pitcher on hand and drink all day long, but especially
during nursing sessions.
I tried to get a
nurse to bring me
water, but was informed that
water was not allowed
during labor, and given ice chips instead.
During therapy, the rehabilitation technician or
nurse should accompany the patient into the
water to provide assistance and reassurance until the patient is accustomed to the activity.1