Your Baby, Your Choice
Courtney Carter
/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2024

Your Baby, Your Choice

Feeding options and support to help your baby thrive

A certified lactation consultant at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center (SVMC), Kimberleigh Weiss-Lewit, MA, IBCLC, PMH-C says, “How a family chooses to feed their child is a personal choice that deserves to be respected and supported. The most important thing is ensuring the child is getting adequate nourishment. That may come in the form of breast milk, donor milk, formula, or a combination of the three. Every parent should learn about and carefully consider their options and make the choice that works best for them.”

With over 30 years of experience advising families on feeding options and practices, certified lactation consultant Bridget Bromirski, C-PNP, IBCLC in SVMC’s Women’s and Children’s Services Department encourages all parents-to-be to make full use of all resources available related to the care and feeding of their baby.

“There’s an expression ‘you don’t know what you don’t know.’ I think that applies particularly well to having a baby,” says Bromirski. “Throughout a pregnancy, parents should try to learn about all the resources available to them and learn all they can; this includes feeding options. Just as you want to be comfortable and confident in the choices you make related to delivery, you want to go home with the same sense of confidence about how you’ll feed your baby and know where to turn when you have questions.”

 

SVMC offers the following pre- and post-natal resources related to feeding a newborn. To learn more about these resources, call (802) 447-5160:

Childbirth Education: during the final trimester, covers feeding options and other topics related to delivery and caring for a newborn

Prenatal lactation class: offered every other month to all expectant parents to learn more about lactation, breastfeeding, and feeding their baby human milk

Postpartum lactation support: consultation with a board-certified lactation consultant immediately after birth and throughout a new family’s stay at the hospital  

Ongoing lactation support: SVMC’s lactation consultants are available 24/7 to support and assist in the days, weeks, and months after birth.

The Baby Café: Based out of the Bennington Community Market at 239 Main St., Bennington every Wednesday from 11 to 12:30 p.m., the Baby Café is a free and friendly resource for new and expectant parents—no matter how you are or plan to feed your child. Staffed with International Board-Certified Lactation Consultants and/or RNs, the Café provides breastfeeding support in an informal, drop-in group setting with lunch provided.

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Moving Forward Safely

One of the most frustrating and anxiety-producing traits of our COVID –19 pandemic is how much uncertainty is involved in all aspects of this disease. Symptoms caused by the Coronavirus, age groups affected, the usefulness of medications, anticipated death rate, and the timeline for development of a vaccine are examples of information that sometimes change on a weekly basis.

Vermonters have done a great job of limiting the spread of the virus and protecting our most vulnerable neighbors by following the Governor's "Stay Home, Stay Safe" order over the past few months. Now, we've all been directed to wear masks in public. Both Bennington and Wilmington's Select Boards have passed local mandates requiring masks in public places. Thanks to these efforts—along with distancing, handwashing, and other factors—Vermont is among the states with the fewest number of infections. Continuing each of these important infection-prevention strategies is crucial to returning to a more normal way of life.

As we open up and begin to re-connect, we fully expect to see a rise in COVID –19 cases in Vermont. Thankfully, we have had time to prepare for this increase. We also have adequate PPE, and increased testing will help us gather crucial information for stemming the spread with less disruption to our normal lives.

More than ever, I find it helpful to focus on what we have learned and how it can help us move forward safely. Here is some of what we have learned so far: Most large hospitals, often treating over 1000 COVID patients daily, effectively protected their workers by obsessively following the rules of screening, hygiene, distancing, and masking. Each of these components is designed to work together; Each alone has its inherent limits.

  • Absent quick testing at the workplace, the best screening is asking employees if they have COVID-like symptoms (fever, chills, new cough, shortness of breath, sore throat, loss of taste or smell) and to stay home if they do.
  • Washing our hands (or using sanitizer) after touching well-handled items or visiting populated areas. Washing your hands 10 times daily is not too often.
  • Though an uncovered sneeze or cough can travel farther, 6 feet distancing continues to be the sweet spot for safety.
  • Masks (double layer cotton and surgical) are effective to prevent spreading of large and some small droplets containing virus. They also seem to give some minimal protection to those wearing a mask. Since possibly 40 percent of transmission happens when we do not have symptoms, we wear our masks to protect others and to suppress overall infection rate. They also help many people (not all) to avoid touching their face. The downside is a warm chin; the upside is you may be protecting someone from a significant illness. Masks are not a symbol of government intrusion. Masks are simply a tool to protect others and show empathy.

It is difficult to predict how many COVID-19 infections will occur in our communities in the coming months. What I am certain of is that our choices, on where we go and what we do, often affect the safety of those around us. As we learn to live with this virus in our community, following the recommendation above will help us all.

Marie George, MD, is SVMC’s infectious disease specialist.

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