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Breast Milk Supply

My grandmother told me she didn't produce enough milk to breastfeed any of her 3 daughters. My mother didn't produce enough to breastfeed me. Does this mean I will have a problem producing milk?







Milk supply is a concern of many mothers. Your mother’s and grandmother’s experience makes it even more likely that you would benefit from working with a lactation consultant when your baby is born.

Many factors work together to determine milk supply. Prolactin is the main milk-producing hormone. Oxytocin is the hormone that causes the milk to “let down” so the baby can get it. At the beginning, a mother’s body does not know how much milk it needs to produce. A supply-and-demand dance with the baby helps to set the production levels.

The more often and more effectively a baby nurses, the higher mom’s prolactin levels, and the more milk is produced. Frequent, short nursing stimulates milk production more than longer nursing less frequently. Getting plenty of fluids is also important for mom’s to make plenty of milk.

Many women are told that they are not making enough milk, even when the baby is getting plenty to grow and thrive. This often happens if the mother is not able to express much milk, if she doesn’t feel a let-down reflex, if she doesn’t leak much, if the baby seems hungry in only an hour, if the baby starts spending less time at the breast, or if the baby still enjoys a bottle after nursing. Most of the time, these are false alarms.

The best way to tell that a baby is getting enough milk is that the baby is making plenty of wet diapers, plenty of poop, and is growing as expected. These babies will usually seem satisfied or sleepy immediately after nursing.

Whatever happened with your mother and grandmother, there is a good chance that you will be able to produce enough milk for your baby with expert support and advice from a good lactation consultant.

Alan Greene MD FAAP

Reviewed by: Khanh-Van Le-Bucklin MD & Rebecca Hicks M.D.
Originally published: April 26, 2002
Last reviewed and updated: August 2008






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