---
name: managing-breastfeeding-support
language: en
description: Structures lactation assessment with latch evaluation and common problem management. Use when assessing breastfeeding, managing lactation difficulties, or documenting lactation support.
tags:
  - management
  - obstetrics-and-gynecology
  - valuation
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Obstetrics
    - Gynecology
    - Maternal-Fetal Medicine
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---

# Managing Breastfeeding Support

Structures lactation assessment with latch evaluation, supply monitoring, and evidence-based management of common breastfeeding complications per ABM (Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine) clinical protocols and WHO/UNICEF Baby-Friendly standards.

## Why This Skill Exists

The AAP, ACOG, and WHO recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life, with continued breastfeeding alongside complementary foods for at least 12 months (AAP) to 2 years (WHO). Despite strong evidence for reduced infant infection, SIDS, obesity, and maternal breast/ovarian cancer risk, only 26% of US infants are exclusively breastfed at 6 months. Early breastfeeding difficulties — inadequate latch, perceived low supply, nipple pain, engorgement, mastitis — are the primary reasons for premature cessation.

The Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding provide the institutional framework, while ABM clinical protocols guide the management of specific lactation problems. This skill ensures that breastfeeding assessment is systematic, problems are identified early, and management follows evidence-based protocols.

---

## Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)

1. **Delivery details** — vaginal or cesarean, gestational age at delivery, complications? (Default: from delivery summary)
2. **Infant details** — birth weight, current weight, weight loss percentage, age in hours/days? (Default: from neonatal chart)
3. **Feeding history** — time of first feeding, frequency, duration of feeds, supplementation given? (Default: from nursing flowsheet)
4. **Breast history** — prior breastfeeding experience, breast surgery (augmentation, reduction, biopsy), nipple anatomy (flat, inverted)? (Default: from history)
5. **Medical conditions** — maternal medications (compatibility with breastfeeding), HIV status, active HSV lesions on breast, maternal diabetes? (Default: from medical record)
6. **Infant conditions** — jaundice, hypoglycemia, NICU admission, tongue-tie, cleft palate, prematurity? (Default: from neonatal record)
7. **Maternal goals** — exclusive breastfeeding, combination feeding, pumping? (Default: from patient discussion)
8. **Support system** — partner support, access to IBCLC (International Board Certified Lactation Consultant), WIC participation? (Default: from social assessment)

### Documents to Request

- Delivery summary with skin-to-skin initiation timing
- Neonatal weight log (birth, daily, current)
- Feeding log (frequency, duration, supplement volumes)
- Maternal medication list (check LactMed for compatibility)
- Nursing assessment notes (latch quality, nipple integrity)
- Lactation consultation notes (if IBCLC involved)
- Bilirubin levels (if jaundice evaluation)
- Newborn metabolic screen results

---

## Step 1: Assess Latch Using the LATCH Scoring System

| Component | 0 | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| **L** — Latch | Too sleepy, no sustained latch | Repeated attempts, holds nipple | Grasps breast, tongue down, lips flanged, rhythmic suck |
| **A** — Audible swallowing | None | A few with stimulation | Spontaneous and intermittent |
| **T** — Type of nipple | Inverted | Flat | Everted |
| **C** — Comfort (breast/nipple) | Engorged, cracked, bleeding, blisters | Filling, reddened, small blisters, mild soreness | Soft, non-tender |
| **H** — Hold (positioning help) | Full assist, staff holds infant at breast | Minimal assist, one hand from staff | No assist; mother able to position |

- **Score 7–10:** Good latch — reinforce technique
- **Score 4–6:** Moderate difficulty — lactation consultation recommended
- **Score 0–3:** Poor latch — urgent IBCLC referral, develop supplementation plan

---

## Step 2: Assess Milk Supply and Infant Output

### Expected Infant Output by Day of Life

| Day | Wet Diapers (minimum) | Stools (minimum) | Typical Feeding Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 1 | 1 (meconium) | 8–12 feeds, colostrum volumes (2–10 mL per feed) |
| Day 2 | 2 | 1–2 (transitional) | 8–12 feeds |
| Day 3 | 3 | 2–3 (transitional → yellow) | 8–12 feeds; lactogenesis II expected (onset of copious milk) |
| Day 4 | 4 | 3 (yellow, seedy) | 8–12 feeds |
| Day 5+ | 6+ | 3–4 (yellow, seedy) | 8–12 feeds |

### Weight Monitoring Thresholds
- **Acceptable weight loss:** Up to 7% of birth weight in first 3–5 days
- **Concerning weight loss:** 7–10% — increase feeding frequency, assess latch, consider supplementation
- **Excessive weight loss:** > 10% — urgent evaluation for feeding adequacy; supplement and refer to IBCLC
- **Expected weight regain:** Return to birth weight by 10–14 days
- **Expected growth:** 20–30 g/day (5–7 oz/week) after day 5

### Signs of Adequate Transfer
- Audible swallowing during feeds
- Softening of breast after feeds
- Infant satisfied between feeds (relaxed fists, alert-calm state)
- Appropriate wet/stool output
- Steady weight gain

---

## Step 3: Manage Common Breastfeeding Problems

### Nipple Pain and Trauma
| Cause | Assessment | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Shallow latch | Lower lip not flanged, clicking sounds | Reposition: asymmetric latch, chin to breast first, nipple to nose technique |
| Tongue-tie (ankyloglossia) | Short or tight lingual frenulum; limited tongue elevation/extension | Frenotomy referral (if functional limitation confirmed); IBCLC assessment post-procedure |
| Nipple vasospasm | Blanching/purple discoloration after feeds, Raynaud-like pain | Warmth, avoid caffeine/nicotine; nifedipine 30 mg daily if severe |
| Thrush (candidal) | Burning pain, shiny/flaky skin, infant oral white plaques | Miconazole 2% to nipples after feeds + infant oral nystatin; fluconazole 400 mg × 1 then 200 mg/day × 14 days for resistant cases |

### Engorgement
- Onset: typically day 3–5 (lactogenesis II)
- Management: frequent feeding (q2–3 hours), warm compresses before feeding, cold compresses after, hand expression to soften areola before latch (reverse pressure softening)
- If severe: therapeutic breast massage, anti-inflammatory (ibuprofen 400–600 mg)

### Mastitis
- Clinical diagnosis: focal breast erythema, warmth, tenderness + systemic symptoms (fever ≥ 38.5°C, malaise)
- **Do not stop breastfeeding** — continued emptying is essential
- Management per ABM Protocol #36:
  - Effective milk removal (frequent feeding or pumping from affected breast)
  - NSAID for pain/inflammation
  - Antibiotics if: no improvement in 24–48 hours, or presenting with fever, or crack/wound at nipple
  - First-line antibiotic: dicloxacillin 500 mg QID × 10–14 days or cephalexin 500 mg QID
  - Assess for abscess (fluctuant mass) — ultrasound-guided aspiration or I&D if abscess confirmed

### Low Milk Supply
- Assess modifiable causes: infrequent feeding, supplementation reducing demand, poor latch, retained placenta, thyroid dysfunction, medications (pseudoephedrine, combined OCs)
- Management: increase feeding/pumping frequency (power pumping: 20 min pump, 10 min rest × 3), galactagogues (metoclopramide 10 mg TID — discuss risks; domperidone where available), fenugreek (limited evidence)
- Refer to IBCLC for comprehensive assessment

---

## Step 4: Medication Safety During Breastfeeding

- Use **LactMed** (TOXNET/NLM database) as primary reference — not package inserts, which are overly conservative
- Most medications are compatible with breastfeeding
- Absolute contraindications to breastfeeding: maternal HIV (in high-resource settings), active untreated TB, certain chemotherapy agents, radioactive isotope therapy (temporary cessation), illicit drug use (case-by-case)
- Common safe medications: ibuprofen, acetaminophen, most antibiotics, sertraline, paroxetine, insulin, levothyroxine, inhaled corticosteroids
- Caution: lithium, atenolol, amiodarone, high-dose aspirin — monitor infant or consider alternatives

---

## Step 5: Pumping and Return-to-Work Planning

- Introduce pumping after breastfeeding is well-established (~3–4 weeks) unless earlier pumping is needed for separation or supply concerns
- Flange sizing: proper flange fit is critical (nipple should move freely without areolar compression)
- Pumping schedule at work: pump every 3 hours to maintain supply; 15–20 minutes per session
- Milk storage guidelines (ABM):

| Location | Duration |
|---|---|
| Room temperature (up to 25°C) | 4 hours |
| Refrigerator (4°C) | 4 days |
| Freezer (−18°C) | 6–12 months |

---

## Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)

1. **Is the LATCH score documented** with objective assessment of each component?
2. **Is infant weight trajectory documented** with percentage change from birth weight?
3. **Is feeding frequency and duration documented** with evidence of adequate transfer?
4. **Are complications identified** with specific evidence-based management plans?
5. **Is IBCLC referral documented** when latch scores are poor or weight loss is excessive?

---

## Quality Audit

- [ ] LATCH score or equivalent latch assessment documented
- [ ] Infant birth weight, current weight, and weight loss percentage documented
- [ ] Feeding frequency and duration documented
- [ ] Wet and stool diaper counts documented
- [ ] Breast exam documented (engorgement, nipple integrity, masses)
- [ ] Infant oral exam documented (tongue-tie, palate, suck reflex)
- [ ] Skin-to-skin initiation time documented (goal: within 1 hour of birth)
- [ ] Supplementation plan documented with volume, method, and reason (if given)
- [ ] Maternal medication list reviewed for lactation compatibility (LactMed reference)
- [ ] Mastitis/abscess evaluated and treated per ABM protocol
- [ ] IBCLC referral documented (if indicated)
- [ ] Pumping plan documented (if returning to work or supplementing)
- [ ] Follow-up plan documented (weight check within 48–72 hours of discharge for at-risk infants)
- [ ] Emotional support and encouragement documented

---

## Guidelines

1. **Assess latch at every feeding contact** — early identification and correction of latch problems prevents nipple trauma, pain, and supply failure.
2. **Weight loss > 7% by day 3 requires intervention** — do not wait for the 10% threshold to act. Increase feeding frequency, assess latch, and consider supplementation.
3. **Do not stop breastfeeding for mastitis** — continued milk removal is the primary treatment; stopping increases abscess risk.
4. **Use LactMed, not package inserts** — most package inserts recommend against breastfeeding due to lack of data, not due to evidence of harm.
5. **Tongue-tie evaluation requires functional assessment** — not all visible frenula require frenotomy; the decision should be based on functional breastfeeding impact, not anatomy alone.
6. **Avoid routine supplementation** — unnecessary formula supplementation reduces breast stimulation and supply. When supplementation is needed, use it strategically and document the indication.
7. **Support the mother's goals** — if a mother chooses combination feeding or exclusive pumping, document the plan and support it without judgment.
8. **Schedule early follow-up** — the AAP recommends a weight check within 48 hours of discharge for breastfed infants; this is the highest-impact intervention for preventing severe dehydration and jaundice.
