Besseres Stillen: Ein Leitfaden für Ärzte zur Pflege ohne Schmerzen und Frustration

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Better Breastfeeding

by Linda D. Dahl, MD

A "breastfeeding guide, with empowering ... advice and solutions for the trickiest issues, from a pioneering ENT doctor and breastfeeding expert"--

FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New

Publisher Description

The ultimate modern-day breastfeeding guide, with empowering, medically sound advice and solutions for the trickiest issues-from a pioneering ENT doctor and breastfeeding expert.In today's breastfeeding friendly environment, the pressure to nurse is intense. We hear over and over that breastfeeding is natural, and every woman can do it. The truth is, the majority of moms need help breastfeeding, but they're forced to sift through varying viewpoints from a dizzying host of sources instead of being able to turn to a doctor for advice. And when breastfeeding doesn't work and they're forced to give up, they're the ones getting blamed for failure. What modern women need is information, not opinions- science-backed facts to help them make their own informed decisions about breastfeeding, without feeling ashamed or bullied.In Better Breastfeeding, Dr. Linda Dahl presents a new paradigm for breastfeeding based on diagnosing and treating mothers and babies using anatomy and physiology. She offers a comprehensive overview of how breastfeeding works, why it fails, and what to do about it. Dr. Dahl takes you through the basics of breastfeeding in a week-by-week guide and explores solutions for little-understood difficulties like gape restriction and tongue tie, nipple and breast pain, issues with milk supply, or abnormal nursing behaviors.Better Breastfeeding is the all-encompassing, no-holds-barred primer that every mom needs before and during her breastfeeding journey so she can advocate for herself and her baby.

Author Biography

Linda Dahl, MD, is an ENT-otolaryngologist who also started her own practice, where she focuses on infants with breastfeeding issues, and developed a methodology to help bring mothers and infants together without pain, frustration, or multiple consults. She has treated over 23,000 baby/mom breastfeeding pairs over the years with a nearly 90% success rate. She has also written and co-written articles published in such scientific journals as the International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology and the Journal of Voice and the book, Clinicians Guide to Breastfeeding- Evidence-based Evaluation and Management.

Review

"I really wish this book had been around when I was having my babies. Linda has made the information that we actually need and want available to us all in a straightforward, accessible, easy-to-comprehend way, never losing sight of how fraught these early days of motherhood can be. She has given us all a gift."—Brooke Shields

"It is so refreshing to hear someone demystify breastfeeding! Every woman's breastfeeding journey is her own and full of unique challenges. I'm excited about Dr. Dahl's direct approach to the complexities of breastfeeding."—Connie Simpson, author of The Nanny Connie Way

Review Quote

"I really wish this book had been around when I was having my babies. Linda has made the information that we actually need and want available to us all in a straightforward, accessible, easy-to-comprehend way, never losing sight of how fraught these early days of motherhood can be. She has given us all a gift." --Brooke Shields "It is so refreshing to hear someone demystify breastfeeding! Every woman's breastfeeding journey is her own and full of unique challenges. I'm excited about Dr. Dahl's direct approach to the complexities of breastfeeding." --Connie Simpson, author of The Nanny Connie Way

Excerpt from Book

Chapter 1 Breast Is Stressed: Is Breastfeeding Right for You? We have long been told that breast is best. This is true for the most part, especially when it comes easily. But, like everything, when something comes easily, we take it for granted. We call it normal. We assume every mom will be able to breastfeed with the same overflow of milk, and that all babies will find their way to the nipple. We hear over and over again that feeding your baby is natural, and nature always provides. Given those circumstances, who wouldn''t want to nurse? The truth is that breastfeeding is no different than anything else. Sometimes it''s easy. Sometimes it''s hard. There is often a learning curve. And even if you plan on nursing for a long time, you may not make it to the finish line, because not everyone does. We hear all about the benefits: nutrition, immunity, bonding-the list is endless. But what we don''t hear often enough is that for some of the millions of moms who give birth each year, breastfeeding is impossible for very real biological and physiological reasons. For others, it is at best uncomfortable and at worst incredibly painful. For still others, it is undesirable for any of a whole host of reasons, from family structure to time management to postpartum complications. Breastfeeding, like childbirth, is not one size fits all. What works for most moms isn''t necessarily going to work for you. Educating yourself before you start breastfeeding is important. Despite what the media, doctors, and family and friends tell you, answers to breastfeeding problems aren''t always obvious. If you wait to find help until after you give birth, you could end up caught in the maze of other people''s opinions. And trust me, those opinions won''t save you when it''s two o''clock in the morning and your baby can''t latch on to your traumatized nipples. Or when you''ve nursed for hours and he''s still hungry. Although breastfeeding is one of the most beautiful experiences for a new mom when it works, it can also be one of the most heartbreaking when it doesn''t. And that heartbreak can linger for months and years after you stop. While it is wonderful to hope for the best, it''s also important to prepare for reality. Your decision to breastfeed is yours and yours alone, and I want to help empower you with the facts before you even start. The History of Breastfeeding in Medicine Speaking of facts, why are they so hard to find? Like so much of medicine that pertains to the feminine, there is little medical information about breastfeeding that''s accurate. There is no accepted range of normal in our medical textbooks. No mention of how to keep a good milk supply going on boards exams. As doctors, we don''t even learn how a baby transfers milk out of a breast, even though it''s one of the most fascinating biological processes. Instead, even as doctors, we are left with folklore, pseudomedicine, and misinformation. With all this confusion, how do you, as a mom, know who to turn to when you run into trouble? And why is so much of what you hear contradictory and misleading? To understand that riddle, we have to dig into the history of breastfeeding in medicine. Until the early 1900s, the majority of babies in the United States were born at home with the help of midwives. Midwives encouraged things like immediate skin-to-skin contact and keeping baby and mom together for as long as possible, and, as such, the majority of moms breastfed. Moms who couldn''t breastfeed had two options: wet nursing or dry nursing. Wet nursing meant having another mom who was already producing breastmilk (usually from a recent pregnancy) nurse your baby. This was the most popular option and was, at one point, a highly organized profession of women who had recently lost a baby and/or struggled to make ends meet. Dry nursing meant giving your baby solid foods, like ground rice or some other grain, and milk from an animal, like a cow, sheep, or goat. In 1900, as allopathic medicine was becoming a new profession, medical doctors started getting involved. As doctoring took root, so did the medicalization of childbirth. The all-male doctors-women weren''t allowed in medical school-had very different schools of thought from those of midwives. They believed pregnancy was a diseased condition that required as much intervention as possible. Moms were encouraged to give birth in hospitals. They were given drugs and made to undergo procedures that actually increased the number of deaths in childbirth for both moms and babies. Babies were even separated from their mothers immediately after being born. Doctors also had strong opinions about human breastmilk and thought it was bad for babies. Instead, they encouraged moms to use evaporated animal milk. When the babies started developing scurvy and rickets, a "formula," with additives such as cod liver oil and orange juice, was recommended. Doctors even gave out recipes for it. Ironically, although these early concoctions were thought to be healthier, formula-fed babies still suffered far more bacterial infections than their breastfed friends. But as the medical profession grew stronger, so did the influence of doctors and their flawed advice. The industrialization of feeding babies had a similar course. The rubber nipple was invented by Elijah Pratt in 1845. Shortly afterward, the first commercially available formula was produced in 1867 by Justus von Liebig. Similac (which stands for "similar to lactation") was invented by Alfred Bosworth in the 1920s, and other formulas followed. Even late into the 1930s, evaporated milk continued to be used as an alternative because it was cheap and widely available, and "shown in clinical studies" to be just as good as breastmilk. With all these other options, it''s no surprise that breastfeeding became less popular when women''s roles in the workplace shifted. During World War II there was a huge decline in breastfeeding rates in the United States. After the war, more than half of all babies were given some type of formula instead of breastmilk. By the 1950s, that number continued to decline, and only one in five women was breastfeeding. On October 17, 1956, a group of seven Catholic housewives got together in a Chicago suburb and decided to do something about these low rates. They wanted to save the art of breastfeeding and pass it on to other moms, taking the "You can do it if I can" approach. And boy, had they done it! Between them, they had the collectively nursed fifty-five children, with raging success. Pooling together everything they knew, they created notes and journals that eventually became a book. That book, which is still available today, is called The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding. Inspired by a shrine in St. Augustine, Florida, that is dedicated to Nuestra Se

Details ISBN0593233654 Short Title Better Breastfeeding Pages 288 Language English Year 2022 ISBN-10 0593233654 ISBN-13 9780593233658 Format Paperback Imprint Rodale Books Subtitle A Doctor's Guide to Nursing Without Pain and Frustration Country of Publication United States Publisher Potter/Ten Speed/Harmony/Rodale Illustrations 5-10 B&W LINE ART Publication Date 2022-02-15 AU Release Date 2022-02-15 NZ Release Date 2022-02-15 US Release Date 2022-02-15 UK Release Date 2022-02-15 Author Linda D. Dahl, MD DEWEY 649.33 Audience General

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  • Condition: Neu
  • Format: Paperback
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-13: 9780593233658
  • Author: Linda D. Dahl, MD
  • Book Title: Better Breastfeeding
  • ISBN: 9780593233658

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