Maybe it will work this time:

________________________________________
From: Vedrana Valčić 
Sent: Thursday, March 23, 2006 11:32 AM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: FW: [ozmidwifery] Water for BF babies

1. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends breastfeeding
According to the AAP, "Human milk is species-specific, and all substitute 
feeding preparations differ markedly from it, making human milk uniquely 
superior for infant feeding. Exclusive breastfeeding is the reference or 
normative model against which all alternative feeding methods must be measured 
with regard to growth, health, development, and all other short- and long-term 
outcomes. In addition, human milk-fed premature infants receive significant 
benefits with respect to host protection and improved developmental outcomes 
compared with formula-fed premature infants... Pediatricians and parents should 
be aware that exclusive breastfeeding is sufficient to support optimal growth 
and development for approximately the first 6 months of life and provides 
continuing protection against diarrhea and respiratory tract infection. 
Breastfeeding should be continued for at least the first year of life and 
beyond for as long as mutually desired by mother and child."

A.A.P. Breastfeeding Policy Statement: Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk 
Pediatrics Vol. 115 No. 2 February 2005

(http://aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/pediatrics;115/2/496)
2. http://rehydrate.org/breastfeed/faq-exclusive-breastfeeding.htm 
FAQ SHEET 5 
Reprinted June 2004


  
Healthy newborns enter the world well hydrated and remain so if breastfed 
exclusively, day and night, even in the hottest, driest climates. Nevertheless, 
the practice of giving infants water during the first six months-the 
recommended period for exclusive breastfeeding-persists in many parts of the 
world, with dire nutritional and health consequences. This FAQ discusses these 
consequences and the role of breastfeeding in meeting an infant's water 
requirements.

 
Why is exclusive breastfeeding recommended for the first six months? 

International guidelines recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first six 
months based on scientific evidence of the benefits for infant survival, 
growth, and development. Breastmilk provides all the energy and nutrients that 
an infant needs during the first six months. Exclusive breastfeeding reduces 
infant deaths caused by common childhood illnesses such as diarrhea and 
pneumonia, hastens recovery during illness, and helps space births.


Is early supplementation with water a common practice? And if so, why?

The practice of giving water and other liquids such as teas, sugar water, and 
juices to breastfed infants in the first months is widespread throughout the 
world, as illustrated in Figure 1. This practice often begins in the first 
month of life. Research conducted in the outskirts of Lima, Peru showed that 83 
percent of infants received water and teas in the first month. Studies in 
several communities of the Gambia, the Philippines, Egypt, and Guatemala 
reported that over 60 percent of newborns were given sugar water and/or teas.

The reasons given for water supplementation of infants vary across cultures. 
Some of the most common reasons are: 
* necessary for life 
* quenches thirst 
* relieves pain (from colic or earache) 
* prevents and treats colds and constipation 
* soothes fretfulness 
Cultural and religious beliefs also influence water supplementation in early 
infancy. Proverbs passed down from generation to generation advise mothers to 
give babies water. Water may be viewed as the source of life-a spiritual and 
physiological necessity. Some cultures regard the act of offering water to the 
newborn as a way of welcoming the child into the world.

The advice of health care providers also influences the use of water in many 
communities and hospitals. For example, a study in a Ghanaian city found that 
93 percent of midwives thought that water should be given to all infants 
beginning on the first day of life. In Egypt many nurses advised mothers to 
give sugar water after delivery.

  



How do breastfed babies get enough water?

Depending on temperature, humidity, and the infant's weight and level of 
activity, the average daily fluid requirement for healthy infants ranges from 
80-100 ml/kg in the first week of life to 140-160 ml/kg between 3-6 months. 
These amounts are available from breastmilk alone if breastfeeding is exclusive 
and unrestricted (on-demand day and night) for two reasons:

Breastmilk is 88 percent water. 
The water content of breastmilk consumed by an exclusively breastfed baby meets 
the water requirements for infants and provides a considerable margin of 
safety. Even though a newborn gets little water in the thick yellowish first 
milk (colostrum), no additional water is necessary because a baby is born with 
extra water. Milk with higher water content usually "comes in" by the third or 
fourth day. Figure 2 shows the principal components of breastmilk.

Breastmilk is low in solutes. 
One of the major functions of water is to flush out, through the urine, excess 
solutes. Dissolved substances (for example, sodium, potassium, nitrogen, and 
chloride) are referred to as solutes. The kidneys-though immature up to the age 
of approximately three months-are able to concentrate excess solutes in the 
urine to maintain a healthy, balanced body chemistry. Because breastmilk is low 
in solutes, the infant does not need as much water as an older child or adult.
  






What about infants in hot, dry climates?

Water in breastmilk exceeds the infant's water requirements in normal 
conditions and is adequate for breastfed infants in hot, dry climates. Studies 
indicate that healthy, exclusively breastfed infants in the first six months of 
life do not require additional fluids even in countries with extremely high 
temperatures and low humidity. Solute levels in the urine and blood of 
exclusively breastfed babies living in these conditions were within normal 
ranges, indicating adequate water intakes.


Can giving water to an infant before six months be harmful?

Offering water before the age of six months can pose significant health hazards.

Water supplementation increases the risk of malnutrition. 
Displacing breastmilk with a fluid of little or no nutritional value can have a 
negative impact on an infant's nutritional status, survival, growth, and 
development. Consumption of even small amounts of water or other liquids can 
fill an infant's stomach and reduce the baby's appetite for nutrient-rich 
breastmilk. Studies show that water supplementation before the age of six 
months can reduce breastmilk intake by up to 11 percent. Glucose water 
supplementation in the first week of life has been associated with greater 
weight loss and longer hospital stays.


Water supplementation increases the risk of illness. 
Water and feeding implements are vehicles for the introduction of pathogens. 
Infants are at greater risk of exposure to diarrhea causing organisms, 
especially in environments with poor hygiene and sanitation. In the least 
developed countries, two in five people lack access to safe drinking water. 
Breastmilk ensures an infant's access to an adequate and readily available 
supply of clean water.

Research in the Philippines confirms the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding 
and the harmful effect of early supplementation with non-nutritive liquids on 
diarrheal disease. Depending on age, an infant was two to three times more 
likely to experience diarrhea if water, teas, and herbal preparations were fed 
in addition to breastmilk than if the infant was exclusively breastfed. 


Should water be given to breastfed infants who have diarrhea?

In the case of mild diarrhea, increased frequency of breastfeeding is 
recommended. When an infant has moderate to severe diarrhea, caregivers should 
immediately seek the advice of health workers and continue to breastfeed, as 
recommended in the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) 
guidelines. Infants that appear dehydrated may require Oral Rehydration Therapy 
(ORT), which should only be given upon advice of a health worker.1 


1 Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS), used in ORT, helps replace water and 
electrolytes lost during episodes of diarrhea. Super ORS, with a carbohydrate 
base of rice or cereal for better absorption, has been developed to improve 
treatment.


How can programs address the common practice of water supplementation?

To address the widespread practice of water supplementation in early infancy, 
program managers should understand the cultural reasons for this practice, 
analyze existing data, conduct household trials of improved practices, and 
develop effective communication strategies for targeted audiences.

Health care providers and community volunteers need to be informed that 
breastmilk meets the water requirements of an exclusively breastfed baby for 
the first six months. They may also require training on how to communicate 
messages and negotiate behavior change. Examples of messages developed in 
breastfeeding promotion programs that address local beliefs and attitudes about 
the water needs of infants are shown in the box.
  
Providing accurate information, tailoring messages to address the beliefs and 
concerns of different audiences, and negotiating with mothers to try out a new 
behavior can help establish exclusive breastfeeding as a new community norm.

  
Communicating the Message "Don't Give Water"

The following messages have been used in programs to convince mothers, their 
families, and health workers that exclusively breastfed infants do not need to 
be given water in the first six months. The most effective ways of 
communicating the messages depend on the audience and the practices, beliefs, 
concerns, and constraints to good practices in a particular setting. 

Make clear the meaning of exclusive breastfeeding 
* Exclusive breastfeeding means giving only breastmilk. This means no water, 
liquids, teas, herbal preparations, or foods through the first six months of 
life. (It is important to name the drinks and foods commonly given in the first 
six months. One program found that women did not think the advice "do not give 
water" applied to herbal teas or other fluids.) 
Take ideas often associated with water and apply them to colostrum
* Colostrum is the welcoming food for newborns. It is also the first 
immunization, protecting a baby from illness. 
* Colostrum cleans the newborn's stomach. Sugar water is not needed. 
Explain why exclusively breastfed babies do not need water
* Breastmilk is 88 percent water. 
* Every time a mother breastfeeds, she gives her baby water through her 
breastmilk. 
* Breastmilk has everything a baby needs to quench thirst and satisfy hunger. 
It is the best possible food and drink that can be offered a baby so the baby 
will grow to be strong and healthy. 
Point out the risks of giving water
* Giving water to babies can be harmful and cause diarrhea and illness. 
Breastmilk is clean and pure and protects against disease. 
* An infant's stomach is small. When the baby drinks water, there is less room 
left for the nourishing breastmilk that is necessary for the infant to grow 
strong and healthy. 
Link good breastfeeding practices to adequate fluid intake
* When a mother thinks her baby is thirsty, she should breastfeed immediately. 
This will give the baby all the water that is needed. 
* The more often a woman breastfeeds, the more breastmilk is produced, which 
means more water for the baby. 


  
Related LINKAGES Publications 
* Facts for Feeding: Birth, Initiation of Breastfeeding, and the First Seven 
Days after Birth, 2003
  
* Facts for Feeding: Breastmilk - A Critical Source of Vitamin A for Infants 
and Young Children, 2001
  
* Facts for Feeding: Recommended Practices to Improve Infant Nutrition during 
the First Six Months, 2004
  
* Quantifying the Benefits of Breastfeeding: A Summary of the Evidence, 2002
  
* Recommended Feeding and Dietary Practices to Improve Infant and Maternal 
Nutrition, 1999 



References

Almroth SG, Bidinger P. No need for water supplementation for exclusively 
breastfed infants under hot and arid conditions. T Roy Soc Trop Med H 1990; 
84,602-4.

Armelini PA, Gonzalez CF. Breastfeeding and fluid intake in a hot climate. Clin 
Pediatr 1979; 18:424-5.

Brown K et al. Infant-feeding practices and their relationship with diarrheal 
and other diseases in Huascar (Lima), Peru. Pediatrics 1989 Jan;83(1):31-40.

Glover J, Sandilands M. Supplementation of breastfeeding infants and weight 
loss in hospital. J Hum Lact 1990 Dec;6(4):163-6.

Goldberg NM, Adams E. Supplementary water for breast-fed babies in a hot and 
dry climate - not really a necessity. Arch Dis Child 1983; 58:73-74.

Hosssain M et al. Prelacteal infant feeding practices in rural Egypt. J Trop 
Pediatr 1992 Dec; 38(6):317-22.

Popkin BM et al. Breast-feeding and diarrheal morbidity. Pediatrics 1990 Dec; 
86(6):874-82.

Sachdev HPS et al. Water supplementation in exclusively breastfed infants 
during summer in the tropics. Lancet 1991 April; 337:929-33.

Victora C et al. Infant feeding and deaths due to diarrhea: A case-control 
study. Am J Epidemiol 1989 May;129(5):1032- 41.

World Health Organization. Breastfeeding and the use of water and teas. 
Division of Child Health and Development Update, No. 9 (reissued, Nov. 1997).




  
Exclusive Breastfeeding: The Only Water Source Young Infants Need-Frequently 
Asked Questions is a publication of LINKAGES: Breastfeeding, LAM, Related 
Complementary Feeding, and Maternal Nutrition Program, and was made possible 
through support provided to the Academy for Educational Development (AED) by 
the Bureau for Global Health of the United States Agency for International 
Development (USAID), under the terms of Cooperative Agreement No. 
HRN-A-00-97-00007-00. The opinions expressed herein are those of the author( s) 
and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or AED.

 
LINKAGES
Academy for Educational Development
1825 Connecticut Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20009 U.S.
Phone   (202) 884-8221
Fax       (202) 884-8977
E-mail  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website http://www.linkagesproject.org/

3. In breastfed babies, not only is extra water unnecessary, giving bottles of 
water to quench baby's thirst may also lessen the desire to breastfeed. This 
will interfere with the balance between mother's milk supply and baby's demand. 
Bottles of water are also likely to cause nipple confusion. A baby who is too 
warm or thirsty, but not hungry, can satisfy his need for more water by feeding 
more frequently and just enough to get the watery foremilk, but not necessarily 
the creamier hindmilk. Breastfeeding babies are great self-thirst-quenchers.
http://www.askdrsears.com/html/2/T023000.asp
Vedrana
________________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Maternity Ward 
Mareeba Hospital
Sent: Thursday, March 23, 2006 5:52 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ozmidwifery] Water for BF babies

Up north here we are beset by grandma's who are always telling mothers that the 
baby needs extra water to drink. I know that that is not the case but I need 
references to be able to quote from please. 
We can't get on the internet from this computer so full articles would be most 
helpful. 
Thanks 
Judy


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