I currently work in private practice as an IBCLC and as a doula. I am currently available for lactation office visits at the Pasqua South Medical Clinic or alternatively I can book visits in your home.

For office visits please call 306-525-6837
For in home consults call 306-550-6143 or email kasmith@accesscomm.ca
For doula inquires call 306-550-6143 or email kasmith@accesscomm.ca

For more information visit my website

Monday, March 26, 2012

Don't be a boob: let the kid eat

Today I am sharing an opinion piece by a local reporter and photographer for the Uof R School of Jouralism re: breastfeeding in public. Hope you enjoy!

OPINION - Don't be a boob: let the kid eat

By Elise Thomsen
Nobody complains about the sight of animals nursing their young out in the open, but if an image of a human breastfeeding in public were presented to the North American public a debate would follow. Some people think public breastfeeding is just downright indecent.

Maybe they think humans don’t qualify as animals anymore, or are uncomfortable with the reminder that we really are animals. Or maybe human women’s breasts have evolved to the point where they are now solely there for the sexual entertainment of their male counterparts and producing milk is just a funny quirk.

Opponents of breastfeeding in public suggest a breastfeeding mother pump and use a bottle, go to the bathroom to breastfeed, plan around the babies eating schedule, or, at the very least, cover up with a blanket.

All these suggestions make anybody who has spent time around infants certain that those in opposition have not.

Pumped breast milk must be refrigerated and then warmed before it can be given to the baby. Mothers already carry diaper bags, purses, and at least one baby. If opponents were offering to lug the extra accoutrements required for carting around pumped breast milk for the mothers, this might be a viable option.

A mother planning her errands around an infant’s eating schedule flies in the face of decency. Some babies will nurse about once an hour for the first couple weeks of life, and at least every few hours after that. Starving a child or holding a women captive in her house both qualify as abuse.

The suggestion that they should go to the washroom to nurse is best defended by the mothers themselves with the often repeated “do you eat in a room where other people poop?”.

Covering up with a blanket would work wonderfully if mothers were nursing inanimate objects but some babies will use all their strength to put up a fuss until they can see their mother’s face. And they should!

Baby is learning important things about non-verbal communication by watching his mother’s facial expressions and his eye muscles are getting stronger as he learns to focus on different parts of his favourite person.

Besides, mother and child are simultaneously releasing important bonding hormones that will become even more important as the child grows up. We evolved that way.

And the benefits go on. Breastfed babies have stronger immune systems, are less prone to obesity, and some studies suggest they have higher IQs. Mothers benefit from the most natural way to help shed the baby weight, a decreased occurrence and duration of post-partum depression, and, for those who breastfeed for at least two years, a significantly decreased risk of pre-menopausal breast cancer.

The World Health Organization, Canadian Paediatric Society, and American Academy of Pediatrics all recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life as best for the baby. All three actually recommend nursing even longer.

Whatever the objections, watching a baby scream of hunger is surely more offensive than seeing what is, really, a modest amount of skin.

Elise Thomsen ( elisethomsen@gmail.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. ) is a contributing reporter and photographer for the University of Regina’s  School of Journalism 2012 news service for weekly papers in Saskatchewan. She is from Michigan, and has spent 16 weeks in the newsroom of Jamac Publishing in Kindersley and another eight weeks at the Weyburn Review on internship. She will graduate this spring with a particular interest in reporting on important community developments, the arts, and human rights issues.

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