Family
planning for the Breastfeeding Woman
Breastfeeding
has important health benefits:
-
Provides
the best nutrition for the child.
-
Protects
the baby from life-threatening diarrhea that other foods or
contaminated water might cause.
-
Passes
the mother’s immunities to the child, which helps protect the
baby from life-threatening infectious diseases such as measles.
-
Help
develop a close relationship between mother and child.
-
May
help protect the mother against breast cancer later in life.
Breast
milk is the best food for nearly all babies. In some situations the
baby’s life depends on continuing to breastfeed. Therefore it is
very important to delay another pregnancy. Delaying
pregnancy avoids early weaning and the many health problems that
often result.
Breastfeeding
itself helps to prevent pregnancy. Breastfeeding alone , without
another family planning method, can provide effective protection
against pregnancy for the first 6 months after delivery. It does so
if:
-
The
women has not had her first menstrual period since childbirth
(bleeding in the first 56 days-8weeks-after childbirth is not
considered menstrual bleeding), and
-
The
woman is fully or nearly fully breastfeeding - at least 85% of
the baby’s feedings are breast milk.
This
is called the Lactational Amenorrhea Method (LAM).
By
definition, a woman is not using LAM if the baby gets substantial
food other than breast milk OR the mother’s menstrual periods
return OR the baby reaches 6 months of age.
To protect herself
from pregnancy, she should then:
-
Choose
another effective family planning method
that does not interfere with breastfeeding (not combined oral
contraceptives before her baby is 6 months old).
-
Continue
to breastfeed her baby if possible, even while beginning to give the baby other food. Breast milk is the healthiest
food for most babies during the first 2 years
of life. She should breastfeed before giving other
food, if possible. If the baby’s hunger is satisfied first by
Brest milk.
All
breastfeeding women, whether or not they are using LAM, should be
counseled on:
-
When
they can and should start particular family planning methods.
-
The
advantage and disadvantages of each method, including any
effects on breastfeeding.
If
a breastfeeding woman needs or wants more protection from pregnancy,
she should first consider no hormonal methods (IUDs, condoms, female
sterilization, vasectomy, or vaginal methods). She also can consider
fertility awareness-based methods, although these may be hard to
use. None of these methods affects breastfeeding or poses any danger
to the baby.
Women
who are breastfeeding can start progestin-only methods-progestin-only
oral contraceptives, long-acting injectables, or Norplant
implants-as early as 6 weeks after childbirth.
The
estrogen hormone in combined oral contraceptives may reduce the
quantity and quality of Brest milk. Therefore the World Health
Organization recommends that breastfeeding women wait at least 6
months after childbirth to start using them. Another method, if
needed, can be used until then.