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Expectant and Postpartum Moms
Reply to "Have formula on hand before labor?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]No. If you plan to BF, you don't need any bottles or formula. Having it around just makes it easier to doubt yourself and give up. Unless you had issues previously, I wouldn't even worry about it. [/quote] This is not true. Studies show that women who supplement before their milk comes in are more likely to be successful in breastfeeding. It helps when the baby is calm and doesn't end up in the NICU with hypoglycemia or even worse, brain damage from dehydration. Milk can take up to a week to come in - a baby will die if not given food or water within 3 days.[/quote] Stop fear mongering. Please cite these BS "studies". It's incredibly rare to have a newborn hospitalized for dehydration and there are plenty of signs you'd have to be an absolute moron to miss. Plus, you take the baby to the pediatrician and they check for such things. I've had multiple children and never purchased any formula. If you really feel you need it in a few days, plenty of places have curbside pickup. I wouldn't bother with it, and I definitely wouldn't supplement unless my pediatrician told me that I needed to. [/quote] You're an idiot. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1876285917305661 We had data on inpatient feeding for 105,003 (96.6%) vaginally delivered newborns and 34,082 (97.0%) delivered by Cesarean. Among vaginally delivered newborns, readmission after discharge from the birth hospitalization occurred for 4.3% of those exclusively breastfed during their birth hospitalization and 2.1% of those exclusively formula fed during their birth hospitalization (p<0.001)… For Cesarean births, readmission occurred for 2.4% of those exclusively breastfed during the birth hospitalization and 1.5% of those exclusively formula fed during the birth hospitalization (p=0.025)… 4% is not rare. The reason it isn't higher is because most people use common sense and supplement. Some people do produce enough milk soon after birth. Many, many don't. [/quote]
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