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  4. Is Baby Getting Enough Milk?

Is Baby Getting Enough Milk?

Most new mothers are concerned about their babies getting enough milk. In the first few days, when you're in the hospital your baby should stay with you in your room if there are no complications with the delivery or with your baby's health. Don't expect the baby to wake you up when she is hungry. You will have to wake the baby every one to two hours to feed her.

At first you will be feeding your baby colostrum, your precious first milk that is thick and yellowish. Even though it looks like only a small amount, this is the only food your baby needs. In the beginning, you can expect your baby to lose some weight. This is very normal and is not from breastfeeding. As long as the baby doesn't lose more than 7 to 10 percent of her birth weight during the first three to five days, she is getting enough to eat.

Keep Tabs on Diapers

You can tell your baby is getting enough milk by keeping track of the number of wet and dirty diapers. In the first few days, when your milk is low in volume and high in nutrients, your baby will have only one or two wet diapers a day. After your milk supply has increased, your baby should have five to six wet diapers and three to four dirty diapers every day.

Consult your pediatrician if you are concerned about your baby's weight gain. You should visit your pediatrician between three to five days after your baby's birth and then again at two weeks of age.

After you and your baby go home from the hospital, your baby still needs to eat about every one to two hours and should need several diaper changes. In the early weeks after birth, you should wake your baby to feed if four hours have passed since the beginning of the feeding. (If you are having a hard time waking your baby, you can try undressing her or wiping her face with a cool washcloth.) As your milk comes in after the baby is born, there will be more and more diaper changes. The baby's stools will become runny, yellowish, and may have little white bumpy “seeds.”

Your Breasts Will Regulate Milk Amounts

You can feel confident that your baby is getting enough to eat because your breasts will regulate the amount of milk your baby needs. If your baby needs to eat more or more often, your breasts will increase the amount of milk they produce. To keep up your milk supply when you give bottles of expressed breast milk for feedings, pump your milk when your baby gets a bottle of breast milk.

Other signs that your baby is getting enough milk are:

  • Steady weight gain after the first week of age. From birth to three months, typical weight gain is four to eight ounces per week.

  • Pale yellow urine, not deep yellow or orange.

  • Sleeping well, yet baby is alert and looks healthy when awake.

Remember, the more often and effectively a baby nurses, the more milk there will be. Breasts produce and supply milk directly in response to the baby's need or demand.

  1. Home
  2. Get Ready for Baby
  3. Caring for Baby — and Staying Fit
  4. Is Baby Getting Enough Milk?
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