Interview 06
Mixed breast and bottle feeding because the mother haemorrhaged badly after a Caesarean Section and was very ill for a long time. Expressing didn’t improve milk supply.
This woman agreed to be interviewed because she says that she is a good example of combination feeding actually working. She was very ill at the time of her baby’s birth and for a long time afterwards. No amount of expressing improved her milk supply so she and her husband used top-up feeds of formula. This gave her the added advantage of allowing someone else to feed the baby when she was unable to do it or needed to rest. It also allowed her husband, who did everything for the baby while she was ill, to experience feeding as well. Because she is in a wheel chair, she has extra help in the house but still considers herself the ‘hub’ of the home. Being in a wheel chair did not affect her ability to breastfeed. However, her most important breastfeeding aid was a U-shaped bean bag that enabled her to have the baby on her lap for feeding while sparing her arms from his weight. She is very proud of having breastfed her baby. The formula top-ups gradually increased in volume and number so that by the time she returned to work when the baby was six months old, he was completely weaned from the breast. She says that it was very important to keep things in perspective even though she wanted to strive for perfection.