Lana
Lana was diagnosed in 2019, when she was pregnant with her first child. She formula fed her older child and is currently undecided about how to feed her new baby.
When Lana had her first baby, she suffered from severe depression. She felt that her healthcare team was focused so completely on preventing HIV transmission that they neglected to care for her: everything for the baby like I wasn’t existin. As she had been diagnosed late in pregnancy there was not even any discussion about breastfeeding.
Lana has an undetectable viral load now. She and her husband are undecided about whether to breastfeed their unborn baby. Lana wants to consider breastfeeding but does not feel supported by her medical team to do so and feels like they do not like her asking questions. She has been researching the available evidence from across the world. She expressed frustration about the limited research available on breastfeeding and HIV, and especially from high income settings.
Early in her current pregnancy, Lana experienced hyperemesis, which is a severe form of morning sickness. This meant that her viral load became detectable, and so her husband needed to be tested for HIV (he tested negative).