This is common knowledge. |
+3 Exclusively pumping is my biggest regret from the baby years. Miserable, painful, and robbed me of good memories with my son as a baby. |
![]() To try to answer the question, I think there’s some literature that says pumping doesn’t capture all of the benefits of traditional breastfeeding because the baby’s needs are communicated by contact through saliva- so the feedback loop with the baby is lost when pumping. Not sure if that’s what this person is referring to. Either way, I personally believe the benefits of breastfeeding are extremely oversold to new moms especially after the first 6 weeks or so. |
Formula, 1000% |
What I did: EP. What I wish I did: formula. He is in kinder now and it seems so pointless that instead of snuggling a baby, I handed him to my husband so I could pump. Just feed the baby because it won’t matter how you did it in five years. I promise. |
Formula. He's at a healthy weight now, and sacrificing your time to pump is not necessary. L that time attached to the pump could be put to much better use snuggling and interacting with your baby - beneficial to you and baby. (I despised pumping and resented the time it took away from my baby). |
Maybe you have called in an LC to help you get him to nurse. There are a few more tricks you can do to encourage this. Only use preemie bottle nipples, hold at a horizontal angle, various finger feeds, sns. If you are inclined to give it one more round, it may be worth it. If not, I personally would not EP. I’d just move on to formula. EPing was not awesome for me.
-mom who EPd for 11 wks but eventually got baby to latch and EBF |
Another person who pumped more than I should have - if I had it to do over I would have embraced formula much earlier and saved myself a lot of mental torment and time. For me this was especially true of pumping once I went back to work... |
+100 |
I would recommend switching to all formula. EP especially when you also have to supplement (I did this with my first child) is a huge time commitment and I'm not sure if it's really worth it. Please don't feel any mom guilt about formula only. My now 7yo is perfectly healthy and has grown really well. I wish I had gone 100% formula with her from the start when she wouldn't latch. |
Another exclusive pumping mom here who did a maniacal amount of research here: everyone parrots this "saliva feedback" hypothesis, but I could not find a shred of empirical evidence that it is true. Sure it's discussed in "summaries of research" or discussions of studies, but I was never able to trace it back to the actual study and finding. I did go on to ep "just in case", but wish I had just switched to formula. |
This is so true about so many aspects of BFing. The supposed benefits get repeated over and over without critical thought. Emily Oster is a great resource for finding and interpreting source material on this and other parenting topics. |
Pumping sucks and is super draining. I do believe that breastmilk has benefits, but millions of babies grow up just fine with formula.
If pumping isn't too taxing for you do it once of twice a day (and formula for the rest of the feedings). If not, just go all formula. |
This. You can try a nipple shield to make it easier on the baby too. Talk to a LC before you decide between these two options. |
I EP'd for 8 months and would never ever do it again. At some point I realized how much time I was spending attached to a machine, washing pump parts, etc, and stopped and it was like an enormous weight was lifted. Formula's amazing, I promised myself I would go right to formula if any of my future kids had issues breastfeeding. |