2023 Prose Award Finalist
Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck shows mothers how to navigate their breastfeeding journey while also caring for their mental health.
Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck contains information that you will not find in other breastfeeding books, such as a thorough discussion of breastfeeding’s impact on sleep, safe (and unsafe) bedsharing, and how where babies sleep impacts their mothers’ mental health. This book describes what effective help looks like and gives specific suggestions for partners, grandmothers, and friends who want to help. Mothers will also learn how to navigate healthcare systems that can often undermine breastfeeding and mental health.
Postpartum is hard, no matter how you feed your baby. Yet formula companies tell mothers that all of their problems will be solved if only they would switch. It’s not true; these issues will still be there even if mothers stop breastfeeding. These are the five “I”s of new motherhood: idleness, isolation, incompetence, identity, and intensity. If mothers are unprepared for these feelings, they can undermine both her breastfeeding and her mental health.
Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck provides information on common breastfeeding problems, such as nipple pain and low milk supply, while also keeping mothers’ mental health in mind. Breastfeeding, when it’s going well, protects mothers’ mental health. Conversely, breastfeeding problems increase the risk of depression and anxiety. Dr. Kathleen Kendall-Tackett is both a psychologist and an International Board-Certified Lactation Consultant, with more than 30 years’ experience in both lactation and mental health.
Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck is an evidence-based guide full of practical advice with the goal of helping mothers and babies navigate postpartum and come through it happy, healthy, and securely attached.
Spis treści
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I: The Fundamentals
Chapter 1: A Primer on Breastfeeding
Chapter 2: The Five I’s of New Motherhood
Chapter 3: Breastfeeding: Learned or Instinctual?
Chapter 4: Breastfeeding and Your Mental Health
Part II: Positioning, Latch, and Nipple Pain
Chapter 5: Baby on Your Breast: Positioning, Attachment, and Biological Nurturing
Chapter 6: Sore Nipples and Engorgement
Part III:
Milk Production: How it Works and How to Spot Difficulties
Chapter 7: Making Milk: How You Can Know Your Baby Is Getting Enough
Chapter 8: Delayed Lactogenesis II and Insufficient Milk Supply
Part IV: Sleep and Nighttime Feeding
Chapter 9: Breastfeeding, Sleep, and Mental Health
Chapter 10: Bedsharing and Infant Sleep Location
Part V: Finding Breastfeeding Support
Chapter 11: Family and Community Support
Chapter 12: Hospital, Health Care Provider, and Lactation Consultant Support
Chapter 13: What Postpartum Support Could Be
Part VI: Caring for Your Mental Health
Chapter 14: Postpartum Mood Disorders and D-MER
Chapter 15: Breastfeeding After a Traumatic Birth Experience
Chapter 16: Breastfeeding After Childhood Abuse, Adversities, and Sexual Assault
Part VII: Moving Beyond the Early Days
Chapter 17: Employment and the Breastfeeding Mother
Chapter 18: When Feeding at the Breast Isn’t an Option
References
Index
About the Author
O autorze
Kathleen Kendall-Tackett, Ph D, IBCLC, FAPA, is a health psychologist and international board-certified lactation consultant. She is a fellow of the American Psychological Association in health and trauma psychology. She has been an accredited La Leche League leader for 26 years and served in many board and leadership positions. She was the founding editor-in-chief of the journal
Clinical Lactation and is currently editor-in-chief of
Psychological Trauma. Dr. Kendall-Tackett has authored 490 articles and is the author or editor of 40 books including the bestselling
Breastfeeding Made Simple (with Nancy Mohrbacher) and the
Clinical Lactation Monograph Series. Visit kathleenkendall-tackett.com and follow @Upty Sci Chick.