Mom who exclusively breast-fed son shares heartbreaking post to help others
Landon Johnson would have been five last week. Tragically he
never made that birthday, or any celebration before that after passing away
just days after being born.
His brave mum Jillian has struggled with sharing the details
of her son’s death, fearing she would be judged. But now she has found the
courage to speak out to educate other new mums.
Kidspot reports that baby Landon died after going into
cardiac arrest caused by severe dehydration. The mum-of-two claims her
exclusively breastfed son would still be alive today if he had just been fed a
bottle.
“Did you know newborns aren’t supposed to cry all the time?
They’re supposed to eat and sleep and dirty their diapers. I had no idea that
he was inconsolable because he was starving — literally,” she wrote.
Jillian and her husband Jarrod did everything to prepare as
first-time parents. They also booked into a ‘baby-friendly’ hospital in the US
— which is geared towards breastfeeding — unless a prescription is written by a
paediatrician.
On February 24, 2012, Landon was born. Jillian shares with
Fed is Best that Landon was breastfed exclusively, even though he would
constantly cry unless he was on the breast.
The mum was concerned about the constant feeds and crying,
but was told her son was latching well and was “cluster feeding”.
One lactation consultant did mention that Jillian might have
trouble producing milk because she was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian
syndrome (PCOS), but no one suggested supplement feeding.
She says she trusted the doctors and nurses to help her
through the first few days with a newborn, especially because she was medicated
after her emergency C-section and was a first-time mum.
“But I was wrong. I’ve learned I have to be my child’s
number one advocate,” she wrote in the article.
Landon nursed over nine hours during his first 24 hours of
life, but after being alive just 53 hours, he had lost 9.72 per cent of his
birth weight.
Jillian and her baby born were discharged less than three
days after giving birth. She returned home and Landon continued to frequently
breastfeed “with a mother whose milk had not come in.”
Landon was found unresponsive after eventually falling
asleep from ‘cluster-feeding’.
“We took him home ... not knowing that after less than 12
hours home with us, he would have gone into cardiac arrest caused by
dehydration,” Jillian wrote.
“When a baby is only on the breast, how do we gauge how much
they’re actually getting out? Sure, there should be wet and soiled diapers, and
weight checks, right? And where is the limit as to weight loss and a minimum
for the diapers changed?
Landon was rushed to hospital, put on a ventilator and taken
to the neonatal intensive care unit. Later a brain MRI confirmed a brain injury
from oxygen deprivation due to low blood pressure from dehydration and cardiac
arrest.
Given his poor prognosis, he was tragically taken off life
support 15 days later.
Jillian is still plagued with guilt and anger over losing
her baby boy. When her second child, Stella, was born she was much quieter than
Landon and Jillian kept asking the nurses what was wrong with her. They replied
nothing.
“It was then I realised that it wasn’t normal for a newborn to
cry as much as Landon did. He was just crying out from his hunger, but I didn’t
know, I should’ve known. I still struggle daily feeling as though I failed
him,” she wrote.
Jillian says the best advice she was given was from one of
Landon’s NICU doctors, while he was on life support, who said breast is best
but follow with a bottle, ‘this way you now your baby has eaten enough’.
How much is enough milk?
• Make sure your baby eats every one to three hours and
sleeps for no more than three hours between daytime feeds
• Your baby should have five to six wet disposable nappies
or six to eight wet cloth nappies with urine that is a pale yellow
• A young baby should have two to four loose, grainy,
mustard-colour stools per day
• You should be able to hear your baby swallowing when
they’re feeding
• Check whether your baby empties each breast after feeding,
you should be able to feel the breast becoming lighter and softer after a feed
• If your baby seems satisfied at the end of a feed, and
generally content in between feeds, then you can feel happy that your baby is
getting his or her fill.
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