"Breast Is Best": A Mantra to Promote Infant Health? or Stigmatizing Adage to Guilt Moms

In my last article “Becoming Dad: A Humbling Birth Experience of a New Father and Nurse,” I discussed my journey to becoming a first-time parent and included some of the challenges that being a nurse and a parent present when it comes to the health of your children. This article continues on my journey with the battle we fought against the “breast is best” movement, which advocates that mothers exclusive breastfeeding babies for the first six months of life. Nurses General Nursing Article

Before I go too far into this article, and risk being stoned to death by the maternal-child nurses, lactation consultants, and midwives out there, I would like to make a few critical points.

  1. I'm not against breastfeeding.
  2. I absolutely believe that breastmilk is the best food and source of nourishment for babies.
  3. I think that mothers should be encouraged to breastfeed their babies and supported throughout the process.
  4. I make no claim to be an expert in neonatal, obstetric, or pediatric fields. However, I'm a husband and a father and I will fight for what is best for my wife and child; even if that means it doesn't fit with the strict guidelines of the "baby friendly hospital" or "exclusively breastfed movement."

As I mentioned in my last article, my wife and I are both nurses. Throughout this pregnancy, we have read every article about raising healthy babies/children and have committed to improving the health of our family. We live in a smoke-free home, try to cook healthy meals, engage in primary care regularly, and believe in the benefits of immunization/vaccination. So before our son arrived, it seemed like a no-brainer that he would be exclusively breastfed as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and World Health Organization (WHO), among many others. Fast-forward to after bundle of joy arrived as I helplessly watched my wife and son struggle with the complicated process of learning to breastfeed.

One-by-one each nurse caring for my wife and son would help with positioning and latching, but it never seemed to work correctly. After each nurse had left the room, I saw the look of exhaustion and disappointment in my wife's eyes because it was becoming harder with each feeding and not easier. We inquired about using one of the hospital's breast pumps to help stimulate milk flow but this was met with a great deal of hesitation and remarks of "It's really best to just keep trying naturally, he will catch on soon." Next came the lactation consultant, a nice enough woman who is clearly passionate about her job but made it clear that there is only one way to feed a baby "breast is best". To her credit, she spent an extensive period of time coaching my wife and helping my son. She strongly discouraged the use of a breast pump by suggesting that this be reserved until closer to when my wife would return to work. Whenever my wife voiced anxiety, concern, or disappointment she was told that this was "a part of the process", "completely normal" and "just because it's natural doesn't make it easy." We were discharged from the hospital with packets of paperwork, breast shields, and other tools that reminded us to keep up with the exclusively breastfeeding.

Over the next 24 hours at home my wife, put our son to breast at least every two hours (usually every hour), and he would latch for 15 - 20 minutes on each breast but continued to appear fussy after feedings. We were told that this was common with "cluster feeding" and not to worry or allow this to derail the breastfeeding efforts. He remained alert, active and had plenty of wet diapers, so we continued to watch him closely. At the next day appointment with the pediatrician we were told that our son had severely elevated bilirubin, lost 12% of his birth weight, and had to be readmitted to the hospital. As parents, we felt that we had failed our child. We followed the treatment team's discharge instructions implicitly, and still he decompensated so quickly. We are nurses, and yet we have missed such significant weight loss. How could we have let this happen? If I had only gone to the store and bought some formula, I might have avoided this.

He was readmitted to the hospital and placed in phototherapy, we sat by him and watched helplessly hoping that it would help his little body to remove the excessive bilirubin quickly. My wife remained quiet, but I saw the look on her face knowing that she felt like she was a failure as a mother. I requested that the nurses provide us with formula and a breast pump while we resumed a two-hour breastfeeding schedule with formula supplementation to ensure he received at least 1 oz. per feeding. Breastfeeding continued to be a struggle, but after each attempt, he was offered pumped breast milk and formula (if needed) to ensure he had enough to eat. In the morning the same lactation consultant came to our room to visit us with a commitment to help "fix the problem." She "permitted" my wife's use of the breast pump after each feeding to obtain additional breast milk but wanted to work on getting the baby "back to the breast where he belongs." She made no qualms about "strongly discouraging" any use of the formula because it "can't match the nutrition that your breast milk provides" and "we only want the baby eating the best and most nutritious food". Each time that my wife expressed concern with the idea of stopping the formula supplementation I saw the lactation consultant shut down her protests. As a psychiatric/mental health nurse, I knew that this form of coaching transitioned from inspiring and supportive to instilling guilt and dismissive of my wife's needs, a method that was sure to fail in the long-term.

Eventually, I decided that this dad had enough and I had a "come to Jesus" moment with the well-intentioned lactation consultant and spoke to her "nurse-to-nurse". I told her that my wife would continue to try to breastfeed, but I would not allow her to be bullied into doing things only one way and that my son will be fed in whatever way he needed to grow. I refuse to sacrifice her mental health and ability to bond with him just to say that he was "exclusively breastfed the natural way". While the consultant's intentions were good and she was clearly an expert in this area, I told her that this form of coaching does not best ensure a patient's long-term compliance with any health promotion intervention (e.g. weight loss, smoking cessation, breastfeeding). If a patient's needs are so easily ignored then it creates a divide between patients and providers that is unhealthy to the working relationship. As you might expect, this was not met with tears of joy or heartfelt thanks but we came to an understanding that we would do what needed to be done for our child.

We are now at home, my son primarily consumes breastmilk out of a bottle with some formula supplementation, and he is doing very well. This may not be what works for everyone and does not follow the strict recommendations of exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life but it works for us. I haven't told this story to discourage people from breastfeeding their babies or to imply that we ungrateful for all of the help and support we received in the hospital. I shared our story to help educate parents and healthcare providers.

Parents, you need to listen to their instincts and if you feel something is jeopardizing the safety of your child(ren) then you need to speak up. You need to work with your healthcare providers to achieve the best possible health your child(ren) because you are on ultimately the same team. Healthcare providers, we have a great deal of knowledge and access to resources that the public doesn't have but if we don't listen to parents/families then we won't be able to foster therapeutic relationships or achieve the best possible health outcomes for our patients.

I would like to begin a discussion with the allnurses.com readers include the perspective of parents/grandparents/family members and healthcare providers. Here are some questions to consider...

  • Do you think that we have gone too far in advancing the "breast is best" movement
  • Should we be advocating for "fed is best" instead?
  • Have you personally felt pressured that breastfeeding is the only correct way to feed a baby?
  • Do you see patients being pressured to feel this way in your workplace? If so, who are the groups/individuals who are responsible for this?
  • How do you feel about some baby-friendly hospitals refusing to provide parents with formula unless there is a physician's order (as a method of enforcing exclusive breastfeeding)?
  • What are your tips for encouraging breastfeeding in a way that is supportive of parents without being dismissive of their concerns and beliefs?

Has anyone studied if there is a rise in readmission rates to hosptials for exclusively breast fed infants. I am seeing hyperbilirubinemia and dehydration. This is not healthy for infants and quite costly. I have not seen if the rates have actually changed. I believe in breast milk. Who cares if it is pumped or directly from the breast. Some families are so adamant about breastfeeding that their anxiety gets in the way.

Fathers that advocate for their infants and moms should be congratulated. Having a baby should not be such a noxious event. And again, I believe in breastfeeding, but enough is enough.

Specializes in Emergency, Trauma, Critical Care.

Thank you! This was me 6 1/2 years ago with my first. The lactation consultant was borderline cruel in her encouragement, I felt like a failure. The exhaustion took over ND had it not been for my step mom telling my husband to "give the baby some damn formula and your wife is going to sleep right now as n long as she needs." I'm not really sure what would have happened. I admire the women who rock it,but I couldnt. Good for you for telling her to back off. I wish I had done it sooner with the first one.

I breastfed my kids and also supplemented with formula. My first two had issues latching on and breastfeeding was difficult initially with both. A little formula helped them until my milk came in and they got the hang of breastfeeding. Plus I had no interest in getting up in the middle of night to pump milk. Sleep is precious. With my second child for whatever reason I had one breast that didn't seem to make much milk. It was painful to pump from that side. I called a lactation consultant and nothing she suggested worked. I saw a doctor and she had no answers. If there's going to be an emphasis on breastfeeding, then there needs to be solutions to problems that occur with it.

I think breastmilk is pretty cool, but I don't understand why some women make it out to be the end all and be all of nutrition. Blood is very important, we absolutely must have it, it has unique properties and does amazing things when you think about it, but at the end of the day it's still just blood. The mania that surrounds breastfeeding is a real turn off.

Breastmilk is best, but it's not like formula is the equivalent of a bag of chips and a Coke. There isn't a stigma associated with TPN, is there really a difference? People accept that so much easier for some reason. My dad's generation (born in the 50s) questioned breast milk, no one knew what was in it, there wasn't a way to measure it, so formula was deemed better than breastmilk. I don't see any difference in that generation as far as health issues, longevity, or intelligence. I don't have studies to back up my opinion, but if the difference is that slight that a study needs to be conducted then I'm not going to get excited about it.

What really bugs me is that I don't understand the concern about a child's first year, but the rest of childhood seems to be forgotten. Child obesity is a real problem as well as adult obesity. It doesn't make any sense to me why anyone would be so concerned about breastmilk and then basically not care about nutrition after the first year. Diabetes is a real problem in the United States, there should be a lot more concern about that.

If we want women to breastfeed then we need to allow them space to do it. Once again I don't understand what people are thinking, they want visitors to wash their hands before touching their baby, but if it's a breastfed baby, it's ok to take it into a public restroom and let it eat on a toilet. There are people that don't want their toothbrushes near the toilet, but it's ok to feed a baby on the toilet? Huh?

Women need help with breastfeeding- not guilt trips. Breastfeeding should be encouraged, not thrust on women and there should be real support for it. We need to acknowledge that not all women are able to breastfeed and we shouldn't shame moms that don't want to.

Thank you for sharing. It's so important that medical professionals share these stories as well as other parents, because it really drives home how insane the "breast is best" policies have gotten. My son also wouldn't latch, despite copious support (that also verged on bullying) in the "baby-friendly" hospital. I also didn't produce much milk. Somehow my son escaped jaundice but was dehydrated and had lost 11% of his birth weight by day 3, so we were also readmitted. We "triple-fed" him, a schedule that drove me bonkers, and saw several lactation consultants. We finally switched to exclusively formula when he was two months, though not without tons of guilt on my part. In all that time, though, NO ONE told me that my breasts had nearly every physical marker for insufficient glandular tissue, which meant I couldn't have exclusively breastfed no matter what I did. The hospital kept me in the dark and allowed me to struggle and my son to starve either out of ignorance or a near-religious devotion to breastfeeding (or a twisted combination of both). It is just maddening.

Yes, readmission is on the rise. A large Hospital system in Utah that is certified by the BFHI released data recently that within their system, a large percentage of newborn readmissions are due to feeding issues or complications from exclusive breastfeeding. I recently saw some studies in the UK and Europe that pointed to similar issues and dangers. It's not your imagination.

Yes, readmission is on the rise. A large Hospital system in Utah that is certified by the BFHI released data recently that within their system, a large percentage of newborn readmissions are due to feeding issues or complications from exclusive breastfeeding. I recently saw some studies in the UK and Europe that pointed to similar issues and dangers. It's not your imagination.

I don't know if you're responding to my question, but your answer if quite interesting and needs to be taken seriously. This a great educational topic for all perinatal nurses and physicians, as well as administrators. Baby Friendly should involve more than exclusive breast feeding. I once saw an infant who had nothing to eat for 48 hours and was crying constantly. Parents, physicians and nurses all knew that the mother did not have a drop of even collostrum yet, but agreed not to feed this child formula. That was the only time in my life that I felt like a partner in abuse and I told them I will not be assigned to this infant again unless i could feed. By the end of my shift, mother asked me to give the infant a bottle and she would continue to put him to breast for stimulation. You don't have to give 2 ounces, but supplement with a little formula to support the baby.

Specializes in Community, OB, Nursery.

The issue is not with the BFHI, though; the BFHI steps are not that earth-shattering. The problem is when managers or admins or someone with an agenda misinterprets. The bit about rooming in? It says "allow mothers and infants to remain together 24 hours a day." Allow is the operative word. It doesn't say force, and unfortunately it gets taken that way. Nurseries get taken away completely and sore, exhausted mothers who can barely see straight are up for 48-72 hours straight caring for their babies.

The part about giving infants no other food/drink except mother's milk unless medically indicated? Well, that doesn't mean you can never give it. If the baby is hungry or jaundiced above light level or dehydrated or losing too much weight or is hypoglycemic, that is a medical indication to feed them something. All the best reference texts, even the ones LCs have to study to pass LC boards, will say that rule #1 is feed the baby. Unfortunately - again - that has gotten twisted to mean that formula = poison and has no place in the hospital. Admittedly, it is 3rd best on the WHO preference list for maternal milk substitutions, behind pasteurized donor milk and then unpasteurized donor milk. But it is still considered an acceptable substitute and it can save lives. If I've got a newborn with a sugar of 25 who's already breastfed, God knows I'm not going to wait around for the pasteurized donor milk to thaw out before I feed that kid. I'll pop a bottle of formula and get him on his way.

The whole point of the BFHI is to help mothers who want to breastfeed without undermining their efforts. It just means that hospitals can't do what used to be standard, which was take all the babies to the nursery all night and feed them formula...which definitely works against what we've plainly seen here can be a tenuous relationship, esp at first. It makes me sad that people hear baby-friendly and roll their eyes, because it doesn't have to be that way, but poor implementation and bad examples have made it that way.

Specializes in OB.

Also, the BFHI only goes as far as the hospital. All of those readmissions say to me that moms are completely without support when they get home, from pediatricians, family members, spouses, and community resources. That is a huge problem, and not the fault of the BFHI.

Also, the BFHI only goes as far as the hospital. All of those readmissions say to me that moms are completely without support when they get home, from pediatricians, family members, spouses, and community resources. That is a huge problem, and not the fault of the BFHI.

We have to careful about placing blame. Many people do not have family members, family members don't know what to look for, spouses have inadequate knowledge, baby sees pediatrician 2-3 days after discharge and at that time pediatrician sees something is wrong. That's what my experience has been. Many families and nurses have been indoctrinated that the baby is getting something and that something is enought. The wet diaper standard is not enough. Also, the quiet, sleeping baby may be suffering from hypoglycemia. I've seen that too, but medical care came too late.

Specializes in OB.
We have to careful about placing blame. Many people do not have family members, family members don't know what to look for, spouses have inadequate knowledge, baby sees pediatrician 2-3 days after discharge and at that time pediatrician sees something is wrong. That's what my experience has been. Many families and nurses have been indoctrinated that the baby is getting something and that something is enought. The wet diaper standard is not enough. Also, the quiet, sleeping baby may be suffering from hypoglycemia. I've seen that too, but medical care came too late.

Totally agree. This is exactly my point---there is no safety net in those first few weeks. Other countries have nurses doing home visits multiple times a day in the early days and weeks postpartum, so that moms aren't left to their own devices with breastfeeding, to the detriment of the baby. The point of the BFHI is to get moms (who want to breastfeed) off to the best start, but it's not enough, and it's not to blame for all of the babies who have ever had feeding issues.

Also, the BFHI only goes as far as the hospital. All of those readmissions say to me that moms are completely without support when they get home, from pediatricians, family members, spouses, and community resources. That is a huge problem, and not the fault of the BFHI.

That's kind of a broad leap Libra. I kind of think the BFHI should include comprehensive follow up and links to community resources. Finish what they've started. For most new moms it's all they can do to manage a shower let alone advocate for themselves when they are having difficulty. Indeed I would speculate that most of them don't know their babies are in trouble until it's late in the game. And new dads? They aren't in much better shape and even less-educated.

Specializes in OB.
That's kind of a broad leap Libra. I kind of think the BFHI should include comprehensive follow up and links to community resources. Finish what they've started. For most new moms it's all they can do to manage a shower let alone advocate for themselves when they are having difficulty. Indeed I would speculate that most of them don't know their babies are in trouble until it's late in the game. And new dads? They aren't in much better shape and even less-educated.

I absolutely agree with everything you're saying. I just don't know that the BFHI can be responsible for all that, in that it's an initiative aimed at changing the hospital process to implement recommendations from the WHO, not an actual government program or something. But I agree that all of the problems you listed above, are real, serious problems.