Maryam
Maryam breastfed all her three children but with her oldest one she did mix feeding. The use of formula came about because her child cried a lot and Maryam felt she didn’t have enough milk. Maryam breastfed her second baby for a year and her last child for ten months. But with her youngest son, she started mix-feeding early on, as she was studying full-time. She advises health professionals to talk to expectant parents and demonstrate how breastfeeding is done rather than just giving leaflets.
Maryam breastfed all her three children but with her oldest one, she did mix feeding. She points out that when her first child was born, she had recently arrived in the UK and didn’t know anybody, apart from her husband. She was in her early twenties then and didn’t have any experience with babies and had no advice about breastfeeding.
The use of infant formula came about because her child cried a lot even after she breastfed her, so Maryiam thought that she didn’t have much milk. She recalls that she never used breast pads. She was breastfeeding every three hours and started her baby on formula at two months. She noticed that every time she gave the bottle to her baby they would vomit.
When the baby was seven months old, the doctor told her that her baby has allergic to the formula and changed the formula for soya milk.
Maryam breastfed her second baby for a year and her last child for ten months. But with her third child, she started mix feeding from the very beginning. She was a second year university student and used to breastfeed him in the morning before she left for uni and when she came back. In between the baby was given infant formula.
She used formula feeding at night before the children went to bed and also used it when she went out. She does not like the idea of breastfeeding in public. Maryam thinks that bottle feeding is tricky with all the sterilising and washing and, also expensive. She thinks that breastfeeding is easier and healthier than formula. She said she loves breastfeeding and the only occasions when she fed infant formula to her children were when out in public. Mainly when she was studying as there are no designated breastfeeding areas on campus.
She thinks there is still a need to educate young parents about the benefits of breastfeeding. From her experience, it would be better that health professionals talk to expectant parents and show how breastfeeding is done rather than giving leaflets. In her own experience, she remembers that she was given a bunch of leaflets that she never found the time to read.