All About Breastfeeding
Summary: Lori Jill Isenstadt from All About Breastfeeding is on a mission to normalize breastfeeding..... all around the world. She has interviews with Dr Dawn Obrecht, Abby Theuring, Jessica Shortall, Dr. Jack Newman, Maureen Minchin and more. Learn from mothers who are actively breastfeeding, sharing their personal stories of breastfeeding with ease and babies who just know exactly what to do. Hear intimate stories from mothers about their struggles and pain with breastfeeding. Everyday moms sharing extraordinary stories of what life was like behind their breastfeeding doors. Get help with common concerns such as low milk supply, oversupply, babies who are tongue and lip tied, premature babies, sick babies who are breastfeeding as well as babies who have had surgeries such as heart and cleft surgeries. Book authors and physicians who are huge breastfeeding supporters share their expertise as they all have a common interest. To normalize breastfeeding. Lori interviews mothers and professionals about breastfeeding as it relates to pregnancy childbirth postpartum mothering and newborn parenting
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- Artist: Lori J. Isenstadt IBCLC
- Copyright: All About Breastfeeding©2019
Podcasts:
AAB 277 Itunes reviews and update with Julia
Lori and Talia have a conversation on how she went about sharing her milk
Listen to two mom's breastfeeding stories
Today's show is all about me - not all about breastfeeding, but all about me. Talia gives a more formal introduction telling us about her work as a Physician Assistant. She tells us how, through her own personal health journey of infertility she gradually moved away from practicing mainstream allopathic medicine and moved to a more holistic functional medicine approach.
Chris Auer, BSN, RNC, IBCLC has worked at a tertiary care (or if you prefer- a teaching) hospital for more than 40 years, the last 25 of them in the role of lactation consultant. Her work focuses on supporting mothers across an economic spectrum to meet their breastfeeding goals
The reality is that summertime with kids is a lot of work and taking them to the pool can be exhausting. Talia talk about the added work load of having a baby with a helmet on when you take them out in the heat and keeping the helmet dry during pool time.
Jennifer Grayson is an environmental journalist and the author of Unlatched: The Evolution of Breastfeeding and the Making of a Controversy,
AAB 270 Final show with Henry and his helmet
Rachel is a stay at home mom of 2. Layla is 3 and Levi is 5 months old. Her and her husband live in Rexburg Idaho. She has 2 sisters and is the middle child, which we both agree is the best - as we are well-adjusted. Her family on both sides all live within a 20 minute drive of each other. She can drop the kids off at the grandparents and her favorite thing to do is go home and nap. As she says: She does not want to set the world on fire - just get in a nap.
AAB 268 Lori and Talia continuation of of the saga with Henry and his Helmet
Rachel is a stay at home mom of 2. Layla is 3 and Levi is 5 months old. Her and her husband live in Rexburg Idaho. She has 2 sisters and is the middle child, which we both agree is the best - as we are well-adjusted. Her family on both sides all live within a 20 minute drive of each other. She can drop the kids off at the grandparents and her favorite thing to do is go home and nap. As she says: She does not want to set the world on fire - just get in a nap.
Talkin with Talia this Friday. We have already learned that Henry has plagiocephaly or using laymens terms a flat head. We begin todays show with an informal intro and then get to listen to Talia tell us her story.
AAB 266 Friday talks with Lori and Talia - Getting a helmet for Hank
Alia Macrina Heise is an IBCLC who has been working in the field of lactation since 2004. Alia is considered to be the first authority on dysphoric milk ejection reflex and she has been speaking about D-MER since it was first named and defined in 2008.
Being a PA, she can appreciate the quandary that other physicians are in. You want to balance optimism with being realistic. You can be optimist and the patient can still be empowered but still be realistic at the same time. Talia has a good point when she states: Nobody is going to get anywhere if we are lying to ourselves all the time.