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Breastfeeding carries many benefits for almost all birthing parents and babies, but even more so for high-risk babies. You can be an important part of the health care team by providing your baby with breast milk in the NICU. Your baby may not be ready to nurse at the breast yet. Until they are ready, you can express milk for your baby. If your baby is getting ready to feed at the breast, the following information can help you with this transition. Give your high-risk baby extra time to learn to breastfeed, and let the baby set the pace for learning. Learning to breastfeed effectively is a process that may take days or weeks for premature and many other high-risk babies. But you and your baby can become a breastfeeding team if you are patient and persistent, and maintain a healthy perspective.
Let your doctor and your baby's nurses know that you would like to breastfeed as soon as your baby is ready to start feeding by mouth. In general, a baby must be able to suck-swallow-breathe in a coordinated way to take food by mouth. Some of the signs that a baby is getting ready to do this include:
Breastfeeding is usually less stressful than bottle-feeding for a high-risk baby, because the baby sets the pace. A baby's heart and respiratory rates, oxygen saturation level, and body temperature tend to remain more stable, and often improve, during breastfeeding. This stability means breastfeeding takes less energy, and it is less "work" for the high-risk baby. Of course, a baby must actually latch on and actively suck to get milk during breastfeeding. This may take time for a baby to learn. When bottle-feeding, milk drips in the baby's mouth and a baby must swallow it, ready or not.
The stages listed below describe a baby's progression to direct breastfeeding. They are meant only as a guideline. Progress varies among high-risk babies. A baby might move quickly from one stage to another, or skip a stage altogether. On the other hand, a baby may sometimes seem to get "stuck" at one stage for a few days or weeks.
Nutritive feeding means your baby is able to effectively remove milk from the breast and swallow enough for continued growth and development. This requires nutritive sucking. During nutritive sucking, a baby consistently coordinates suck-swallow-breathe. If you watch, you should notice your baby is sucking at a rate of one suck per second, with a pause for a breath after every few sucks. To take in enough milk, the baby must be able to continue with this pattern for at least 10 to 15 minutes. Quite likely, you will hear your baby swallowing milk, which sounds like a "k" sound in the back of their throat, for at least part of the feeding.
In addition to nutritive sucking, a breastfeeding baby must wake and cue to feed 8 to 12 times in 24 hours. This ensures that your baby will take in enough calories to grow. Usually, there is a progression of feeding cues and the baby becomes hungrier. Some feeding cues include the following:
Your high-risk baby may need extra time to learn to let you know when they are ready to feed (cue-ing). Many parents find that their high-risk babies are too sleepy and sometimes do not seem to know that they need to eat frequently. Your baby's doctor may recommend that you wake your baby to feed.
Usually, a baby is doing more nutritive sucking for hospital discharge to be considered. When your baby is getting close to discharge, you may want to breastfeed for several feedings in a row. Many birthing parents "room in" for 24 hours the day before discharge. After observing several breastfeedings, the NICU staff should have a better sense of the baby's ability to cue for feedings and sustain nutritive sucking, and their response to milk "let-down." They can chart the effect that breastfeeding has on the baby's wet and dirty diaper count. You may be asked questions about signs of milk "let-down" during feedings and whether your breasts feel any softer after feedings. They might also suggest using the opportunity to test weigh your baby before and after a feeding session. This will let the staff know how much milk is being swallowed by your baby.
Test weighing allows the NICU staff to monitor the amount of milk your baby takes during a breastfeeding. The baby is weighed immediately before and after the feeding using an electronic scale that can measure very small amounts (1 to 5 grams or 0.03 to 0.2 ounces) of weight. Your baby will be weighed fully clothed, and no clothing is changed until after the baby is weighed after the feeding, as any change could affect the result. Babies do not take the same amount of milk in at every breastfeeding, and test weighing gives the staff a good idea of how much milk the baby takes in over time.
Your baby still may not be able to consistently demonstrate feeding cues or breastfeed effectively at discharge, but after observing feedings for 8 to 24 hours, the NICU staff will be able to work with you to develop a better discharge breastfeeding plan. Since you and your baby are unique, your discharge plan should be designed with your situation in mind, but it may include all, or some, of the following:
You can breastfeed without pumps, devices, or alternative feeding methods when your baby consistently demonstrates the nutritive sucking associated with effective breastfeeding. Your baby should be doing well and getting enough from only breastfeeding when your baby: