I think, what kellymom said. By the time they have the symptoms - too late. They have been exposed. Both because they are siblings - being part of a family is an intimate business, and because they are feeding together.
DD1 has a cold at the moment and I have been trying not to let DD2 catch it. So after she feeds I have been washing my breast to get her germs off. I just had a search on kellymom to see if I should be doing this and this is what I found:
So, now I'm not sure what I should do...any advice??Will tandem nursing spread germs between my children?
No special measures are normally needed as far as hygiene and the sharing of the breasts. Normal baths and showers will suffice. There is no reason to clean the nipple area between children and, as always during lactation, use of soap on the nipple is not recommended except under special circumstances.
In general, even if one child becomes sick, there is no reason to take any special precautions. Lots of hand washing is more important for limiting the spread of infection, and the anti-infection properties of breastmilk will also help to prevent the spread of illness.
An exception to this is thrush - if anyone involved in the nursing relationship gets thrush, it is important that everyone be treated to prevent reinfection. One source suggests that assigning each child a separate breast might also help to prevent the child without thrush from becoming infected.
By the time symptoms occur in a viral illness, the two nurslings will have been in close contact for days (both in the home and at the breast), and thus the well child will have already been exposed to the illness. In addition, your breasts will have already started to produce antibodies specifically for that illness. These antibodies will help the sick child get well quicker and will also help protect your other child from illness.
There is some speculation that tandem nursing actually hastens the process of antibody production in breastmilk. The breast starts making antibodies soon after exposure to the illness via your child's breastfeeding. If an older child who is not nursing gets sick, the breast will not start making antibodies until mom picks up the virus independently or from baby's mouth (if baby gets sick) -- tandem nursing cuts out the middleman in this process. Washing the breasts between nurslings might even reduce the breasts' exposure to the pathogens and therefore reduce the breasts' efficiency at manufacturing antibodies.
I think, what kellymom said. By the time they have the symptoms - too late. They have been exposed. Both because they are siblings - being part of a family is an intimate business, and because they are feeding together.
Well DD1 has had it for 4-5 days now and DD2 hasn't got it, or maybe she did and my super antibodies just attacked it straight away! lol. Yay for breastfeeding!
Double yay for breastfeeding![]()
I felt both kids while they have both had cold and gastro (separate times) with gastro I would rub some milk in to nipple to clean any bugs from other childs mouth before feeding other.
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