R.A. asks from Glen Ellyn, IL on January 24, 2008
Pumping at Night
My son is 2 1/2 months old and I have been pumping and giving him the bottle for about 1 month now. I wish I could breasfeed him, but my one side produces double the amount of milk and comes out too fast so he chokes and spits up. Here is my question - He is starting to sleep between 7-9 hours at night. Do I need to get up in the middle of the night to pump? I do not feel uncomfortable, I am just concerned that I will not produce enough during the day. Any advice would be helpful.
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Y.S. answers from Chicago on January 25, 2008
Let him sleep, but you should still get up and pump. I used to pump at night for 6 months, once I stopped getting up at night the milk supply went down ...
T.R. answers from Evansville on January 24, 2008
HI, in my experience of breatfeeding the less I pumped and the longer time that went between pumping the less milk i made. If anything pump right before you go to sleep and as soon as you wake up. I was able to breatfeed for 1 year. Good Luck!!!!
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A.M. answers from Chicago on January 25, 2008
you can if you want and store it for when you go back to work, but if you don't feel uncomfortable, then you could skip it. it might affect your supply but probably won't. personally, I got up a little in the middle of the night but then found that i was exhausted and decided that being rested was pretty important.
L.V. answers from Chicago on January 25, 2008
You don't want to go more than 10 hours without nursing. It will affect your milk production.
Hope that helps!
L.
S.F. answers from Indianapolis on January 25, 2008
R. A-
I am not a lactation consultant but I have breastfed two children past the age of one, so I speak more from my own experiences. I don't think that you should worry about not producing enough during the day. Your body will produce as much milk as your baby needs. It's one of the miracles of breastfeeding. I do have one qustion...do you breastfeed him on the other side at all? I would try that for a little while if it is comfortable for you. As far as pumping in the middle of the night, I would try doing that if it doesn't drive you crazy. You could build up a nice supply of bottles before you go back to work.
Good luck and trust your own instincts.
S.
Y.S. answers from Chicago on January 25, 2008
Let him sleep, but you should still get up and pump. I used to pump at night for 6 months, once I stopped getting up at night the milk supply went down ...
T.R. answers from Evansville on January 24, 2008
HI, in my experience of breatfeeding the less I pumped and the longer time that went between pumping the less milk i made. If anything pump right before you go to sleep and as soon as you wake up. I was able to breatfeed for 1 year. Good Luck!!!!
S.P. answers from Indianapolis on January 25, 2008
Dear R.,
Do you think you could nurse him on the side that produces less milk and continue to pump the other?
If you are wanting to produce enough milk for when you return to work then yes, I think you should pump at night.
There are no guarantees that his present sleep pattern will continue anyway so it is better to be safe than sorry.
S.D. answers from Indianapolis on January 25, 2008
Have you tried going back to breastfeeding? He's old enough to regulate how fast the milk comes out now and it would take the work out of pumping for you. Also, laying back so that gravity is pulling the milk toward your body instead of directly in to his mouth can help.
I would be worried about production as well. That's very early to sleep through the night (congrats on that!!!) and many times your body hasn't even regulated what it produces at this point so if you take that pumping out, it could make a difference. However, if you do pump right before bed and right when you get up, that will help. Maybe add a pump time during the day?
Good Luck!
H. answers from Fort Wayne on January 25, 2008
I am currently breastfeeding my second child (the first time we went 10 months). I am currently pumping through the night to build my backup supply. My OB recommended having 2 weeks worth in the freezer (in case you need an antibiotic that isn't safe during breastfeeding. Also a great help if your supply starts to drop off.)
You also want to consider your job. Mine is VERY stressful and long hours. I don't keep up my supply well due to those factors, so the night pumping helps me out. If it's not wearing you out to get up, go ahead and pump to get ahead and see what happens when you go back to work. If your supply is okay at that point, you're fine. You could also stop now and reinstitute the night pumping if you see that you're falling short during the work hours. Your body will adjust back to it.
Good Luck!
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