As a potential mother who will not carry her own baby or be able to breast feed, research such as The Sacred Hour is interesting. I want to find as many ways as possible to establish a loving connection with our baby.
The Sacred Hour: Uninterrupted Skin-to-Skin Contact Immediately After Birth
Raylene Phillips MD, IBCLC, FAAP
Abstract
The manner in which a new baby is welcomed
into the world during the first hours after birth may have short- and long-term
consequences. There is good evidence that normal, term newborns who are placed
skin to skin with their mothers immediately after birth make the transition
from fetal to newborn life with greater respiratory, temperature, and glucose
stability and significantly less crying indicating decreased stress. Mothers
who hold their newborns skin to skin after birth have increased maternal behaviors,
show more confidence in caring for their babies and breastfeed for longer
durations. Being skin to skin with mother protects the newborn from the
well-documented negative effects of separation, supports optimal brain
development and facilitates attachment, which promotes the infant’s
self-regulation over time. Normal babies are born with the instinctive skill
and motivation to breastfeed and are able to find the breast and self-attach
without assistance when skin-to-skin. When the newborn is placed skin to skin
with the mother, nine observable behaviors can be seen that lead to the first
breastfeeding, usually within the first hour after birth. Hospital protocols
can be modified to support uninterrupted skin-to-skin contact immediately after
birth for both vaginal and cesarean births. The first hour of life outside the
womb is a special time when a baby meets his or her parents for the first time
and a family is formed. This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience and should not
be interrupted unless the baby or mother is unstable and requires medical
resuscitation. It is a “sacred” time that should be honored, cherished and
protected whenever possible.
Address correspondence to Raylene Phillips,
MD, IBCLC, FAAP, Division of Neonatology, Loma Linda University Children’s
Hospital, 11175 Campus Street, Suite 11121, Loma Linda, CA 92354.
No comments:
Post a Comment