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 | Introducing a Bottle |
If baby is to be bottle fed in your absence, introduce the bottle prior to returning to work. It is best to breastfeed a baby exclusively for the first three to four weeks, however. This allows the mother's body to establish a milk production prior to separation from the baby, and it helps to avoid "nipple confusion" between the breast and the artificial nipple. Introducing the bottle for substitute or supplementary feedings prior to four weeks has also been found to contribute to a decrease in milk production.
How you introduce the bottle in preparation for returning to work may depend on the length of your maternity leave. If you must return to work within four to eight weeks of giving birth, start by adding a bottle of your expressed milk about one or two weeks beforehand. Choose a feeding when you may normally be away from your baby and only provide a bottle to him/her during that time. This may help the baby adapt more easily to the change, as it will have become a part of his/her regular routine. However, you may want to limit the amount in the bottle, so the baby will be ready to breastfeed within two to three hours.
For a longer maternity leave, you may want to introduce a bottle with your milk by eight to 10 weeks, but there is no need to offer it on a daily basis or at a time when you will be away at work. That can wait until one or two weeks before your return to work.
Some babies will not take a bottle from their mother. It may be necessary to have the baby's father, or someone else, give him/her the bottle. This will also help the baby adjust to someone other than the mother providing the feedings. Also, not all bottle nipples are alike. Some tend to be more compatible with breastfeeding than others, and some babies prefer one type over another.
If you do not have to return to work until the second part of your baby's first year, you probably can avoid introducing a bottle altogether. Older babies often do well when drinking directly from a cup or a sipper-type cup.
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The information on this Web page is provided for educational purposes. You understand and agree that this information is not intended to be, and should not be used as, a substitute for medical treatment by a health care professional. You agree that Lucile Salter Packard Children’s Hospital is not making a diagnosis of your condition or a recommendation about the course of treatment for your particular circumstances through the use of this Web page. You agree to be solely responsible for your use of this Web page and the information contained on this page. Lucile Salter Packard Children’s Hospital, its officers, directors, employees, agents, and information providers shall not be liable for any damages you may suffer or cause through your use of this page even if advised of the possibility of such damages.
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Lucile Packard Children's Hospital is located in Palo Alto, adjacent to Stanford University Hospital, approximately 20 miles north of San Jose, CA and 40 miles south of San Francisco.
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital
725 Welch Road
Palo Alto, California 94304
(650) 497-8000
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