Pregnancy & Birth
- Ask a Question!
- Getting Pregnant
- Your Healthy Pregnancy
- Natural Childbirth Basics
- Preparing for Natural Birth
- Home Birth
- Birth Stories
Raising Baby
Recommended
Choosing to breastfeed has specific benefits for you, the mother. These go beyond the close bond with your baby and the assurance that you are providing him or her with the best nutrition possible.
The choice to breastfeed will effect your reproductive cycle. Nursing your baby can cause your body to stay in a state of amenorrhea longer after giving birth. This means that you have no menstrual cycles or ovulation.
If your baby is nursing often at night and during the day your ability to conceive again can be delayed! Scientists have outlined a method of delaying fertility called the Lactation Amenorrhea Method.
Lactational amenorrhea is a normal state. Some experts believe that the modern-day experience of years of periods is not the optimum situation. They believe that it is far more normal for women to go for extended time without a period - as you do during pregnancy and while you breastfeed.
These experts feel that women who have had fewer periods due to nursing their infants may have a lower chance of developing cancers of the reproductive system.
There is some evidence that nursing a baby lowers your risk for osteoporosis later in life. Your body takes calcium from your bone reserves during lactation - but once your baby begins solids and weans your body replaces the calcium at an increased rate.
Studies have shown that women who breastfed their children are at lower risk of hip fracture and other bone problems.
There is mounting evidence that nursing protects women against breast cancer. Large meta analysis (reviewing the results of many studies and showing the combined data) shows that women who breastfeed have a lower incidence of breast cancer than women who do not breastfeed.
These studies also show that women who were breastfed themselves seem to have a lower risk of breast cancer, so you are giving yourself and your daughters protection by nursing!
Breast feeding has economic advantages for you as well. Using formula can cost anywhere between $1,160 and $3,915! Even if you receive assistance from the United State's Women Infants and Children program (WIC), you will still have to pay for some of your baby's formula. This is true with other nations' assistance programs.
The cost savings of nursing your baby are also seen in your baby's good health. You pay less in medical bills, prescription costs, and insurance co-pays because your baby stays healthier than she might if she were being fed artificial baby milk.
Though nursing your baby is a skill you'll need to spend a little time learning in the early weeks, in the long run it pays off big time. You've already seen numerous reasons. But one huge reason is it saves you effort and allows you to rest.
Use your time nursing your baby to sit down and allow yourself to relax. Rock your baby and focus on him or her. Or read a book or magazine you've been hoping to read. These times will benefit you so much.
Nursing also allows you to feed your baby while lying down. You can nap with your baby - and you should - and if you choose a family bed you can nurse your baby right in your bed at night. You don't have to get up, and after the first few weeks you'll hardly notice your baby waking at night. This results in a far more rested you, and a happy baby.
Your body and your baby expect to breastfeed. Nursing is a natural continuum moving from pregnancy and birth. By breastfeeding your baby, you have access to an instant mothering tool that will help you grow more confident in yourself and your mothering instincts. And you will have a happy baby!
Choosing to breastfeed your child is giving her the gold standard, and giving both of you a great start in your journey together.
Pregnancy & Birth
Raising Baby
Recommended