Interview 10
Little help from midwives in hospital. Used nipple shields for inverted nipples, affected milk supply. Postnatal depression with one child. Dairy intolerance with another. Practices attachment parenting.
A self-employed, home-schooler, this woman has three children, the last two of whom were breastfed. She noticed a big difference in hospital practices when her daughter was born eight years after her first son, feeling as though she was left to do things on her own more with her daughter. Neither the midwives in the hospital nor the community midwives helped her with latching her daughter onto her inverted nipples. Eventually her mother suggested nipple shields which she used until her breastfeeding counsellor advised her to stop. This woman also suffered from postnatal depression with her daughter and used antidepressant’s which she says helped but did not solve the problem. Her daughter started to lose weight at around eight months which she blames on the oral contraceptive that she was taking and she feels that she was ‘bullied’ into giving her formula which she thinks made the child ill. So, after two weeks, she went back to breastfeeding. With her next child she was told to use nipple shields again but the baby became very windy on the nipple shields and was very unsettled. After seeking a lot of help from a variety of health professionals he was diagnosed at six months as dairy intolerant. She went on a dairy free diet and the baby settled. She feels that health professionals give too much conflicting advice and that women need a lot of support for breastfeeding. ‘If the government want more people to breastfeed, they’ve got to put more money into it’ she said.