20 answers

In Hospital with Mastitis- Do I Wean?

This is my 3rd day in the hospital for a severe mastitis infection. The first two days, I kept my 5-month-old with me so she could nurse. But my milk dried up temporarily from fever and dehydration. We tried to give her formula at the hospital because she hadn't eaten in hours, and she refused to take it. She has never had formula. Finally, last night, my husband took her home so he could give her some breastmilk from the freezer. Sad lonely night here at the hospital! My first time away from her. I have a history of repeated mastitis and the docs are gently urging me to wean. My parents and in-laws are aggressively urging me to wean, but I don't know how to transition Cleo to formula. I have tried preventive measures for mastitis such as taking lecithin, eating low saturated fats, taking fish oil, etc. I have 2 older girls who are also hurting with mommy in the hospital, and I don't want to put my family through this again. It breaks my heart, but should I wean? And how best to do it?

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

o my that is a hard one. have you consulted with at least a few great lactation consultants? they can answer all the questions you have! I am so sorry this has to be very hard for you

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

Get a second opinion. Short of some sort of serious medical outcome for you, it can be done. Contact a lactation consultant or a La Leche League leader in your area. If you want to breastfeed, a mastitis infection can be overcome (not easy but it is doable).

While in the hospital, pump what you can and regularly (so you keep levels up). This can help you too.

In the interim go to www.llli.org website to find a consultant in your area (usually free of charge). The website also has information on dealing with mastitis and maintaining a feeding schedule.

See:
http://www.llli.org/NB/NBbreastproblems.html

http://www.llli.org/help_form

5 moms found this helpful

I didn't have to be hospitalized, but I am on week 9 of antibiotics for mastitis which was finally cultured to be MRSA. It's been an extremely stubborn infection which ultimately abcessed to a spot about the size of my palm. The infection decimated my milk supply, and I had no choice but to formula feed since she absolutely refused my breasts- even the good one, and even the pumped milk (the doctor said it sometimes tastes bad with an infection). I struggled with the decision to switch to formula or to continue to try and force the breastmilk, but we are ALL happier now that I did switch to formula. I am not saying you should do this, but I just couldn't subject my baby to week after week after week of different antibiotics, and the pain was torturing me. As for weaning- When she got hungry enough, she drank it. It was as simple as that.
I have another month of antibiotics to take, and I hope it will be gone finally. I know I am so tired of being sick and tired, and I have a four year old to take of as well. As for my daughter, she is fat and happy on the formula.
I hope you get better soon! I know you will make the right decision for you and your baby, whatever that is...

5 moms found this helpful

According to the IBCLC (international board of certificated lactation consultants), DO NOT WEAN!! The baby nursing will actually help draw out the infection, continue to nurse. The composition of the breast milk with change and can actually benefit the baby by giving her some extra immune boosters. The parents, in-laws, or doctors can not make up your mind for you. This is your baby and you have to do what is best for the both of you and that is breast milk. Nurse her more frequently and make sure the breast is emptied before moving on to the other side, if necessary pump after baby is done. Don't limit her time on the breast. Massage the breast as she's nursing. With rest, fluids and antibiotics your supply will come back.
Don't hesitate to call a le leche league in your area or consult with an IBCLC member. Good luck!!

3 moms found this helpful

I went through the same thing, five days in the hospital when my second was two weeks old. I was VERY reluctant to wean. My doctor and a breast specialist finally had to say "listen, this really isn't a choice". I had to do in because my breasts don't drain properly.

It was the hardest thing I ever did. Emotionally I was a wreck, partly because I was still so hormonal. I felt like ias abandoning my baby's needs. But, I did it and she was fine and learned to take the bottle just fine. Once it was all over I felt such a relief. I wasn't worried about being sick anymore. I wasn't being taken away from my older child anymore, and it didn't hurt my bond with the baby.

Do it. Wean. You need to, for yourself and your family. Private messgae me if you want to talk more about it. **sorry about the spelling, I'm on my iPhone.

3 moms found this helpful

Do you bottle feed regularly? That is usually the main reason Moms get mastitis. If you nurse constantly and change positions frequently - mastitis is rare. Probiotics, lots of water, oatmeal and nursing from the breast are all ways to lower the reoccurrences of mastitis.

I would keep nursing, but stop completely or at least lower the amount of times your infant gets bottles.

2 moms found this helpful

C., listen to your doctors. Your breasts are part of your body and you have the right to keep your body infection-free. My gosh, you're the first person I ever heard of being admitted into the hospital for mastitis. Bless your heart!

Your daughter will figure it out. It's okay. Five months is a really decent amount of time to nurse, but as sick as you are, it's okay to quit. One thing you can do is start putting an ounce of formula in with the breastmilk, and then start increasing it little by little until she is taking formula.

Again, do what you need to do to keep you healthy.

Be well,
D.

2 moms found this helpful

I am so sorry that you are struggling with this. I understand how painful it can be. Although I was never admitted to the hospital I had blocked ducts and Mastitis almost continuously for 5 months with my first. They started when she was 3 months old in November and ended in April. I was constantly debating with myself if I should quit. Every time I would get a blocked ducts the pain was so awful that I would say I was quitting as soon as it was gone (I didn't want to stop while I had a block because I wanted my baby to get the block out) then when it was gone and I felt better I would stop, then a week later it would happen all over again. Finally they just stopped happening, I think my milk regulated it self better (I have oversupply), and I was able to nurse her until she was 18 months.
If you really dont want to wean then I just want to encourage you to talk to a lactation consultant or another doctor and see if there is anything else you can do. I know it is painful and very difficult. Don't beat yourself up no matter what decision you make. The most important thing is a happy mom.

2 moms found this helpful

I would also urge a second opinion. As much pro-breastfeeding as I am (and I LOVED bf past one year old), you do need to take care of your own health and you do have a family to take care of.

The problem is that it sounds like your doctor suggests weaning, because they believe it's a quick fix... well it isn't. If you have a resistant bug causing the infections, you may keep getting them, even after weaning.
Frankly as D.P. said they need to figure out what exactly is causing the infection and treat it properly (there are other resistant germs out there, but MRSA is a common one). In the meanwhile nursing actually helps with the treatment by emptying your milk and flushing ducts. If you wean abruptly it might even worsen your condition.

Just one last note... if your extended family is not supportive of whatever decision you make, just don't discuss the subjects with them. Some of the worst parenting decisions I made have come from trying to appease well meaning family members and taking them up on their advice, against my better instinct. Your family, your body, your decision.
Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.