Just one more wrinkle in the life of a working mom — how to handle pumping, saving, and delivering your breast milk.
Just because you're going back to work doesn't mean you need to stop breastfeeding your baby. You might choose to start supplementing with infant formula milk, but you can also continue to use breast milk exclusively if you're willing (and able) to start... pumping milk at work, or if you take extra time during your off hours to express and freeze breast milk.
How should I prepare?
Before you go back to work, discuss your the possibility of pumping milk at work and/or your breastfeeding needs with your employer. Since it's a good idea to freeze breast milk, use this time to get started on expressing and saving breast milk. You'll probably need a couple of weeks to get in the routine of pumping breast milk (and to get the baby used to the nipple of a bottle, if you'll be using one).
Once you start getting the pattern of pumping, don’t forgot to freeze breast milk as much as you can. Prepare your childcare provider too by making it clear how and when you want your baby to be fed while you're at work. If at all possible, find a childcare provider who is close to your workplace (you might be able to arrange to visit for a lunchtime feeding).
How do I express breast milk?
Milk can be expressed manually, using a hand pump, or with a battery-powered or electric pump. A high-tech electric pump can look intimidating (and might remind you of a dairy farm's automatic milking machines), but it won't hurt. The electric ones are noisier (probably not the best kind for pumping milk at work) than hand pumps, but they stimulate the breasts more effectively and make for speedier delivery (plus you can double pump to save time). You likely won't get much milk at all without triggering your letdown reflex; if you're collecting a bit of extra milk at the end of a
feeding, your baby will have done the job for you. If your baby isn't around,
look at photos of him or her, imagine the smell and touch of your baby — and,
most importantly, relax.
Just because you're going back to work doesn't mean you need to stop breastfeeding your baby. You might choose to start supplementing with infant formula milk, but you can also continue to use breast milk exclusively if you're willing (and able) to start... pumping milk at work, or if you take extra time during your off hours to express and freeze breast milk.
How should I prepare?
Before you go back to work, discuss your the possibility of pumping milk at work and/or your breastfeeding needs with your employer. Since it's a good idea to freeze breast milk, use this time to get started on expressing and saving breast milk. You'll probably need a couple of weeks to get in the routine of pumping breast milk (and to get the baby used to the nipple of a bottle, if you'll be using one).
Once you start getting the pattern of pumping, don’t forgot to freeze breast milk as much as you can. Prepare your childcare provider too by making it clear how and when you want your baby to be fed while you're at work. If at all possible, find a childcare provider who is close to your workplace (you might be able to arrange to visit for a lunchtime feeding).
How do I express breast milk?
Milk can be expressed manually, using a hand pump, or with a battery-powered or electric pump. A high-tech electric pump can look intimidating (and might remind you of a dairy farm's automatic milking machines), but it won't hurt. The electric ones are noisier (probably not the best kind for pumping milk at work) than hand pumps, but they stimulate the breasts more effectively and make for speedier delivery (plus you can double pump to save time). You likely won't get much milk at all without triggering your letdown reflex; if you're collecting a bit of extra milk at the end of a
feeding, your baby will have done the job for you. If your baby isn't around,
look at photos of him or her, imagine the smell and touch of your baby — and,
most importantly, relax.