A few tips may help you combine breastfeeding and pumping. These may include breastfeeding first, using your hands, keeping accessories handy, and learning bottle-feeding techniques. Share on ...
When it comes to making parenting decisions, it’s not always clear cut what’s the best choice. How you feed your baby can feel like one of these gray areas. During your pregnancy, you may have read ...
Breast milk is a common food for infants. While breastfeeding rates are rising, many lactating parents supplement breast milk with pumping and/or formula. Breastfeeding, or chestfeeding, has numerous ...
Exclusive pumping is when you feed your baby with only pumped milk, rather than direct breastfeeding or nursing. In practice, you express (or squeeze out) milk from your breast using a pump and then ...
According to a new study from the Yale School of Medicine, pumping could help breastfeeding mothers provide milk to their babies for longer. The study showed that people who used pumps provided human ...
New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change. While curating your baby registry, it’s important ...
Enhanced regulations aim to protect a greater number of working parents. By Alisha Haridasani Gupta and Catherine Pearson Last week, expanded protections for nursing mothers, officially known as the ...
That is, breastfeeding, breast pumping and breast milk. If you’re an employer and you don’t currently have any employees that are or may soon be pregnant, consider why that is, rather than dismissing ...
Until relatively recently, most researchers thought that breast milk was sterile. But it turns out that, like most other body parts and fluids, it’s teeming with bacteria. The composition of its ...
When Sonia Gupta, a Jersey City, N.J., mom of two and a product marketing team leader at CR, had her first baby in 2013, she paid out of pocket—about $200—for a breast pump. But she didn’t have to.