Pregnancy and Childbirth

Antibiotics And Breastfeeding


 

Breastfeeding Navigation


|

Pregnancy and Childbirth Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Breastfeeding Questions |
Breastfeeding And Alcohol |
Vicoden And Breastfeeding |
Tramadol Breastfeeding |
Using Minoxidil And Breastfeeding |
Breastfeeding Moms |
Breastfeeding And Weight Loss |
Breastfeeding Accessories |
Lexapro And Breastfeeding |
Breastfeeding Basics |
Clomid And Breastfeeding |
Breastfeeding Diet |
Herbal Supplements And Breastfeeding |
Breastfeeding Support |
Diflucan While Breastfeeding |

List of Breastfeeding Articles



Breastfeeding Bestsellers

Pregnancy

and Childbirth

Step-By-Step $8




 

Latest Antibiotics And Breastfeeding link added

...

Submit your link on Antibiotics And Breastfeeding!



Pregnancy and Childbirth

 

Antibiotics And Breastfeeding Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Antibiotics And Breastfeeding. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Smoking While Breastfeeding Is Bad Baby

from:

Smoking and breastfeeding are bad for mom and baby, because both will suffer the ill effects of the toxins and poisons contained in cigarettes. Even though the truth about smoking has been known for many years, many women continue to smoke during pregnancy and while they are breastfeeding. In fact, some women smoke during breastfeeding.

Smoking and breastfeeding is a dangerous practice that nursing mothers should avoid. The risk to the baby is compounded if the mother smokes more than 20 cigarettes per day. However, the more cigarettes a woman smokes, the more harmful the effects are to her baby.

For some nursing mothers, heavy smoking can reduce a mother's milk supply and on rare occasions can cause symptoms in the breastfeeding baby, including nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, and diarrhea. Smoking and breastfeeding are harmful because when a nursing mother smokes a cigarette, the nicotine levels in her blood and milk increase and then decrease over time.

If a mother smokes a cigarette just before or during feeding, the risk to the baby is high. The half-life of the nicotine, the amount of time it takes for half the nicotine to be eliminated from the body, is 95 minutes. A nursing mother should not nurse within an hour and a half of smoking a cigarette.

When it comes to breastfeeding and smoking, maternal smoking has been linked to early weaning, lowered milk production, and inhibition of the milk ejection or the let down reflex. It can also lower prolactin levels in the blood. Mothers who smoke have higher metabolic rates and may be leaner than non-smoking mothers.

Mothers who enjoy breastfeeding and smoking may cause their infants to be fussier than infants whose mothers do not smoke. These babies may even be colicky.

Whether or not a mother is breastfeeding and smoking, a baby should not be exposed to second hand smoke from people who are smoking cigarettes around him or her. Breathing second hand smoke poses health hazards, including respiratory illness, stunted development and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome or SIDS.

While most people are aware of the health risks associated with cigarette smoking, including the development of lung, lip, mouth and tongue cancer, many people continue to smoke and allow others to smoke around them. If a mother smokes cigarettes, she is advised to quit. However, she is still advised to breastfeed her baby as many experts agree that the benefits of breastfeeding outweigh the consequences of smoking. A mother can still enjoy the benefits of breastfeeding, even if she smokes.



 

Breastfeeding In The News

A tough itch to scratch

From a runny nose and itchy eyes to a life-threatening anaphylactic reaction, allergies affects one in three New Zealanders. Two Marlborough families cope with severe allergies every day.

Read more...


Small Investment Could Save 11 Million African Lives

In the next five years, 11 million African women and children could be saved by creating near-universal availability of key life-saving interventions, according to The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health and the Countdown to 2015 Decade Report (2000-2010).The Countdown report estimates that these interventions -- antenatal care, emergency care at the time of birth, post-natal ...

Read more...


Manipulating babies' gut bacteria by changing diet can improve future health

London, July 21 : Early childhood is the best time to manipulate babies' gut bacteria to influence future health, since the bacteria appear to respond readily to changes in diet at this age.

Read more...