Imperial Valley Press

Moms seeking formula tire of those who say, just breastfeed

- BY REBECCA BOONE, LINDSEY TANNER AND JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER

As Morgan Fabry drives around Chicago looking for baby formula that is in short supply, she can’t help but be bothered by comments from people who don’t understand why she can’t breastfeed.

Exclusive breastfeed­ing is recommende­d for the first six months of life by major medical entities like the World Health Organizati­on, giving rise to the saying, “breast is best.” But breastfeed­ing doesn’t work for everyone, and that mantra is only adding to the stress Fabry and other parents feel as the shortage drags on.

“The bottom line is fed is best,’’ said Fabry, 34. “I’m getting triggered by people who say, ‘Oh, just breastfeed.’”

At the center of the shortage is the largest domestic manufactur­ing plant in Michigan, which the U.S. government is working to reopen. The Biden administra­tion is also allowing more imports from other countries.

Corryn Chini avoided the baby formula aisle during her grocery shopping trip in Dayton, Ohio this week. With enough formula in her cupboard at home for a week or two, there was no sense in letting the empty shelves trigger feelings of anxiety and guilt.

For Chini, the guilt comes from lingering feelings of failure after she was unable to exclusivel­y breastfeed, starting with her first baby in 2018.

“Breastfeed­ing was a huge struggle and I felt an immense amount of guilt around not succeeding,” Chini said. “In the end I was never able to produce enough, and we had a late diagnosis of tongue-tie, and it was a mess. When I had my second, I thought, ‘I can do this, I can advocate for myself,’ and again, it just didn’t work.”

Her youngest, Evangeline, was born three months ago. Chini is supplement­ing with formula.

There are various barriers to breastfeed­ing, including medical issues for the baby or mom and work and living conditions.

Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ breastfeed­ing group, said exclusive breastfeed­ing for the first six months is recommende­d and safe for most babies, but meeting the recommenda­tions can be “very challengin­g.”

Infants with an uncommon condition called classic galactosem­ia are unable to metabolize sugar in breast milk and need to be fed formula, Feldman-Winter said.

Some medical conditions make it difficult for women to breastfeed, and it isn’t recommende­d for those with HIV or undergoing cancer treatment. And exclusive breastfeed­ing is diffiffiff­icult for working women, who have to pump repeatedly throughout the day.

“There’s even greater barriers in underserve­d areas, women working for hourly wages in low-paying jobs. Those women tend to have even fewer supports to be able to continue to breastfeed.”

Stress releases a hormone that makes it difficult to produce milk, she said. Millions of babies in the U.S. rely on formula, which is the only source of nutrition recommende­d for infants who aren’t exclusivel­y breastfed. Shortages have forced some parents to switch formulas, which doctors say is fine in most cases.

But two children in Memphis, Tennessee, were recently hospitaliz­ed due to a switch in formula related to the shortage, Dr. Mark Corkins of the Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital told The Associated Press Wednesday. The division chief of Pediatric Gastroente­rology at the hospital said the two children who previously required a “specific dietary needs” formula were admitted earlier this month for dehydratio­n after the parents attempted to switch to a separate formula. One child was discharged Tuesday, while the other remained in the hospital in stable condition. The two received IV fluids and supplement­al nutrition.

When Isabel Ramos gave birth in February, she worked hard to try to breastfeed her son, believing it would be beneficial for his immune system and enhance the mother-child connection. She tried pumping and worked with lactation consultant­s, but the infant wouldn’t latch onto her breast.“You feel like a failure because you’re not able to give your baby what it needs and what it wants,” said the first-time mom from Lawrencevi­lle, Georgia.

Because of the stigma, it took her a while to tell people she wasn’t breastfeed­ing.

She’s struggling with those feelings again because she keeps hearing things from relatives and strangers online, like she should try harder to breastfeed because of the formula shortage.

“A lot of men have opinions on it. I’m sorry, are you trying to breastfeed? Then, no, leave me alone.”

Ana Rodney, who runs MOMCares, a Baltimore organizati­on that provides baby supplies and support to new mothers in the city’s Black community, said the shortage has hit many families there hard. Formula feeding is typically more common among Black women — often because they don’t get breastfeed­ing encouragem­ent or support from the white medical community, Rodney said.

Breastfeed­ing requires time, “being able to sit with your baby, being able to bond with your baby and working on your milk supply, not being able to go back to work,’’ she said. “It’s not that easy for some of us even if we want to.’’

Callie Salaymeh’s baby Hazel was just a couple of weeks old when Salaymeh found blood in her diaper and took her to a Chicago emergency room.

The baby had an intoleranc­e to some of the proteins in Salaymeh’s breastmilk, and cutting foods from Salaymeh’s own diet didn’t help. Hazel had to be switched to a special prescripti­on formula for babies with gastrointe­stinal conditions.

“The shortage felt like it hit us before it hit the general public,” Salaymeh said, when her pharmacy called to say the prescripti­on formula was out of stock.

When they had just one can left, Salaymeh began mixing the prescripti­on formula with an overthe-counter formula for babies with sensitive tummies until more of the prescripti­on formula could be found. They mixed formulas for about three weeks, hoping little Hazel wouldn’t get sick.

 ?? COURTESY ANA RODNEY VIA AP ?? This May 2022 photo provided by Ana Rodney shows her with her son, Asher, at home in Baltimore.
COURTESY ANA RODNEY VIA AP This May 2022 photo provided by Ana Rodney shows her with her son, Asher, at home in Baltimore.

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