{"id":3443,"date":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-pregnancy-breast-feeding-during-pregnancy-a-painful-controversial-choice\/"},"modified":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2013-03-22T00:00:00","slug":"condition-pregnancy-breast-feeding-during-pregnancy-a-painful-controversial-choice","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-pregnancy-breast-feeding-during-pregnancy-a-painful-controversial-choice\/","title":{"rendered":"Breast-Feeding During Pregnancy: A Painful, Controversial Choice"},"content":{"rendered":"
I had a positive pregnancy test when my first daughter was just 9 months old, and I immediately called my ob-gyn to share the news.<\/p>\n
"Stop breast-feeding," she told me, and dutifully, I weaned my daughter that night.<\/p>\n
A week later, when I miscarried what turned out to have been a chemical pregnancy<\/a>, I had two things to mourn: the baby I'd expected, and the nursing relationship I'd ended with my daughter.<\/p>\n I wondered, even if the pregnancy had continued, was it necessary to wean her? Why would my doctor have said that?<\/p>\n What I've learned since that day has changed my mind entirely about nursing during pregnancy. In fact, if I am lucky enough to get pregnant while breast-feeding, I'd want to continue the nursing relationship, even extending into a "tandem nursing" situation after the baby is born.<\/p>\n Why don't pregnant women breast-feed more often?<\/strong> Many times, apparently, it's very painful.<\/p>\n According to Wendy Haldeman, one of the founders of the Los Angeles–based The Pump Station, it can hurt to breast-feed during the first trimester. "The nipple soreness is just something the mother has to endure," she tells me. "Some can; others find it is just too painful to continue."<\/p>\n Local mothers who attempted nursing while pregnant agreed with Haldeman. "By the time I was about 2 months pregnant, nursing became excruciatingly painful," Amanda, a local mom, tells me. "I almost cried every time I went to nurse, it hurt so bad. I ended up weaning my son at that point."<\/p>\n Milk supply can also diminish. "My experience is that if the first baby is over a year, the milk supply is not as much of a concern," Haldeman says. "Infants under 9 months of age frequently need to be supplemented with formula because the mother simply cant produce enough milk."<\/p>\n Basically, your body begins producing a different quantity and quality of milk sometime in the second trimester. This is spelled out in Breastfeeding for Dummies<\/em><\/a> by Sharon Perkins, RN, and Carol Vannais, RN:<\/p>\n "Somewhere between four and eight months of pregnancy, your milk does start changing from mature milk back to colostrum<\/a>, the first type of milk that you gave your baby. The colostrum usually tastes a little different than mature milk, so you may find your baby not as interested in this new menu item and starting the process of weaning."<\/p>\n But if I could bear the pain and my baby could bear the "new menu item," is it a good idea from a medical perspective?<\/p>\n
In all my years of playing with my young children in parks, I have never once seen an obviously pregnant woman breast-feeding. Why not?<\/p>\n