The good Baby Wear Breastfeeding Breast Left Right Every 10 Minutes

Mother sometimes let the baby stay long in one breast until full milk, which consequently makes the baby is only familiar with one breast only. We recommend that you give them 10 minutes on each breast so that both breasts can be issued with the perfect milk.

Babies who are exclusively breastfed 6 months have figures lower incidence of infection, preventing obesity and diabetes and to provide protection against breast cancer in the mother.

There are some mothers who choose to feed the baby 'on demand' (waiting for the baby who is breastfed ask) which means breastfeeding whenever the baby shows signs of hunger and in accordance with the wishes of the baby.

And some are breastfeeding routines based on time and let the baby suckle by the number of a certain time limit, for example, every 3 hours once feeding. Usually carried out about 10 minutes for each breast.

The researchers found feeding time limit for 10 minutes on each breast will add more weight at the age of 6-8 weeks and more likely for the baby to continue to breastfeed up to more than 12 weeks compared with infants who breastfeed are 'on demand'.

"Although this study is not large enough in scale, but I agree that most babies should get breast milk from both breasts and parents should offer it to the baby," said Dr Lisa Amir, lactation consultants and researchers from Latrobe University, as quoted of ABC.net.au, Friday (16/12/2011).

Some women occasionally let the baby stay long in one breast to a lot of milk, but this will make the baby get used to one breast only. For that provides 10 minutes of each breast and give the other breast is a better idea.

However, the method provides a time limit for breastfeeding can not apply to all infants, this is because every baby is different so the mother should know how to breastfeed like what makes a mother and baby feel comfortable.

"The important thing is to give both the lactating breast to the baby and not just one of them alone," said Dr. Helen Oddy, nutritionists and researchers from the Telethon Institute for Child Research in Perth.

Dr Oddy said that mothers should not be surprised if the baby can suckle up to 12 times in 24 hours. But if the baby is very sleepy and had gone to bed within a period Lam, then try to wake slowly to breastfeed.

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