Most expectant Mothers who intend to breastfeed their newborns are aware that giving birth in the hospital runs the risk of having your baby get a bottle of sugar water (aka “baby crack”) by a well intentioned but seriously misguided nurse, perhaps to pacify a fussy baby in order to let Mom sleep.
Another reason a newborn may be given sugar water is for “pain management” when the baby receives the synthetic K injection, Hep B shot or newborn screening tests involving a heel prick.
Besides the fact that this sugar water contains glucose derived from genetically modified (GMO) corn, giving a baby an artificial nipple before breastfeeding is established is a great threat to the future breastfeeding relationship between Mom and baby.
As a result, clued in Moms are now advised to include a “no sugar water” clause in their birth plans, with doulas and other birthing advocates remaining watchful while Mom is resting or baby is out of the room for whatever reason.
Now, there is a new game in town that is commonly being used to derail breastfeeding after a hospital birth and arbitrarily give GMO laced commercial formula to babies.
This reason is neonatal hypoglycemia or low blood sugar.
I first became aware of this problem when a friend sent me an email about it. She had been made aware of the situation by a doula from New Mexico who said that women who start off breastfeeding in the hospital are being told by the nurses that their babies have low blood sugar and they need to have formula right away. This misguided advice caused a large number of mothers to stop breastfeeding out of concern that neonatal hypoglycemia might cause harm such as brain damage.
So what’s the truth? Do babies ever need formula instead of rich, immune system boosting colostrum in the hours and days after birth due to blood sugar problems?
The short answer is a resounding NO! Before I thoroughly debunk the egregious practice of using low blood sugar as an excuse to give newborns GMO commercial formula, let’s go over the causes, symptoms and problems associated with the condition.
What Causes Low Blood Sugar in Newborns?
It is true that babies can suffer from hypoglycemia or low blood sugar after birth. Babies are at increased risk for hypoglycemia if any of the following conditions were present:
- The baby was premature, had a serious infection, or needed oxygen right after delivery.
- Mom has gestational diabetes.
- The baby suffers from hypothyroidism or has a rare genetic disorder.
- The baby experienced poor growth in the womb during pregnancy.
- The baby is smaller in size for gestational age.
Symptoms of neonatal hypoglycemia include:
- Bluish-colored or pale skin
- Breathing problems, such as pauses in breathing (apnea), rapid breathing, or a grunting sound
- Irritability or listlessness
- Loose or floppy muscles
- Poor feeding or vomiting
- Problems keeping the baby warm
- Tremors, shakiness, sweating, or seizures
It is important to note that neonatal hypoglycemia may sometimes be present with no symptoms at all.
Is Low Blood Sugar in Newborns Dangerous?
Low blood sugar can indeed be a problem for newborns if severe or persistent as it can affect the baby’s mental function. Rarely, brain damage, heart failure or seizures can occur.
Unfortunately, fear of lawsuits has generated an irrational fear of neonatal hypoglycemia that has resulted in the widespread acceptance by hospital staff that breastfeeding mothers should be separated from their babies with newborns given supplemental formula in the hours and days after birth.
This hyper fear is causing even full term, normal weight babies to be given the painful test for low blood sugar when they don’t need it and many of those to be given formula when it isn’t warranted.
Formula feeding to babies by hospital staff gives new mothers the mistaken and very wrong impression that formula is medicine and good for the baby. It also causes many breastfeeding Moms to lose faith in their ability to properly nourish their children with their own colostrum and milk which interrupts and frequently ends the breastfeeding relationship for good right at the time when baby needs it most!
No Accepted Level for Neonatal Low Blood Sugar
The fact is that there is no generally accepted level that indicates baby has low blood sugar. According to the International Breastfeeding Center, the blood sugar levels required in many hospitals border on absurd with 3.4 mmol/L (60 mg %) routinely considered the lowest acceptable blood sugar.
There is no evidence to back up such a level as the lowest acceptable blood sugar concentration.
In addition, there is no reliable method for accurately measuring blood sugar outside a lab environment. The use of paper strips is not reliable as they tend to underestimate the true value. Truly accurate measures are obtained only by the laboratory which are able to provide a reliable measure of plasma glucose or sugar.
Hospitals Testing for Low Blood Sugar at the Wrong Time
Another problem is that many babies are tested for low blood sugar right after birth and then an hour later with formula being immediately and arbitrarily given if the blood sugar has dropped – even for normal weight, healthy, term babies!
This is totally inappropriate as research has shown that it is normal for the blood sugar in a neonate to drop in the first hour or two after birth! Moreover, a newborn’s blood sugar will naturally rise after the initial drop in the hours after birth – even if the baby is not fed!
Colostrum is Superior to Formula to Treat and Prevent Low Blood Sugar
A little bit of colostrum such as what a newborn would receive from Mom in the first hours after birth maintains blood sugar better than a lot of formula. Babies that are being breastfed have much higher levels of ketone bodies in their blood than formula fed babies or breastfed babies given formula supplements (Pediatrics Vol. 109 No. 3 March 2002, pp. e42). Ketone bodies are highly protective of the baby’s brain.
In addition, babies have been shown to maintain blood sugar better when skin to skin contact with the mother occurs such as would happen with breastfeeding.
If colostrum is superior to formula in maintaining healthy blood sugar levels in a newborn why then are breastfeeding mothers being encouraged by misinformed hospital staff to supplement with GMO laced commercial formula in order to treat an arbitrary condition like neonatal low blood sugar where the required blood sugar concentration is not even scientifically proven as accurate?
Simply criminal isn’t it?
What to Do if Low Blood Sugar Truly is an Issue
Suppose the rare case presents itself where an exclusively breastfed baby truly does have blood sugar levels that are dropping too rapidly or are too low? In those situations, mothers and birth advocates should request that the baby be given banked breastmilk, ideally fed with a Lact-Aid, and not formula. According to the International Breastfeeding Center, every postpartum unit should have banked breastmilk ready and available on site.
The second best option as an alternative to formula is to give the baby an intravenous infusion of glucose rather than formula by mouth.
Whether banked breastmilk or a glucose IV is given, the baby should continue to breastfeed as usual with no interruption!
Be on your guard, breastfeeding Moms as the low blood sugar excuse may be used on you to derail your breastfeeding efforts in the hospital! Make sure appropriate action for dealing with this hospital scenario is clearly outlined in your birth plan. Better yet, skip the hospital and have your baby at home or at a birth center instead and avoid the whole problem from the get go!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Sources:
Anne-Marie Arsenault via Facebook
When I had my first baby in 1972, there was a 24-hour quarantine before I and all moms could ‘have’ our babies. I changed hospitals for baby #2 in 1973, to be able to have rooming-in. Their protocol was to give all newborns a bottle of glucose/water, in case they were to choke at first feed. It took us six weeks to ‘learn’ to bf, as he had an aversion to my slow let-down. I had bf first for a year and planned to do it again. Third child, went back to first hospital, as they had rooming-in and no interference @ birth. But he had umbilical cord around neck, a nurse panicked and cut before he was born (witnessed by my friend and childbirth educator/nurse). Fourth and fifth were home births. Should have done that from first one, but no one told me I could. 🙁 I think I am first home birth mama in Moncton NB Canada. Many more since. No midwives, we just ‘know people’. What finally drove me to hb was yet another procedure in the hospital: an IV line ‘just in case’ for all women in labour. I have a HUGE aversion to needles, and that sealed it for me. Plus I got educated and found a midwife (I was her first of several births). All that to say, each year seemed to bring a new issue to interrupt or interfere in the mother/infant bond. Some were silly and others downright horrible. I saw a nurse jab my first grandson in the heel several times to check blood sugar – told her if she even dared to try one more time the Mom, my daughter, would check herself & baby out of that place immediately. She ended up with C-sec after hb attempt. She has since had two vbacs, with me catching one of them, at home. I’ve seen the sugar story, the jaundice/Billirubin yarn, episiotomy-for-everyone, etc. It is disgraceful and so unnecessary. I should write a book – oh, somebody already has? I think I may have read it.
Jen Fisher via Facebook
Home birth.
Mukhlisah Umm Ibrahim via Facebook
How disgusting. I hate their scare tactics
Julie Saubion via Facebook
Mine refused to eat for 48 hours, they did a heel prick and it came out to 5.2, they said okay, the blood sugars are fine, she’s just not hungry. I gave birth in France.
Melinda Madore Kuegler via Facebook
When my son was born he was in the nicu they want u to pump and breast feed
Karen Hitt via Facebook
I had my daughter in July and all my nurses encouraged breastfeeding. They were constantly offering advice and tips to help us learn together. Unfortunately I have PCOS and it caused my milk supply to be extremely low so I had to supplement with formula and it made my poor little girl have all kinds of digestive issues. I did some research and learned about all the crap in commercial formula and how it’s made and was shocked. Even the organic formulas made in the U.S. aren’t much better. I immediately took her off that junk and put here on WAPF’s homemade formula and the results were amazing. No more diarrhea, constipation, horrible gas or spitting up! My daughter’s pediatrician isn’t too sure about it and would rather I give her commercial formula but it’s not his decision, lol.
Angela Stewart Abulela via Facebook
I know this happens, but what evidence is there that it is “increasing” as this post states? I would rather expect it to be decreasing. Giving glucose water & pushing formula was standard practice 15-20 years ago, but is considered outdated nonsense now in the hospitals I’ve birthed in. One of mine had low blood sugar, I was told to keep nursing, it came right up. There was no hand wringing or mention of formula.
Melissa Mayer via Facebook
Great article! I’m a doula and natural childbirth educator and I get so frustrated with care givers who don’t know a lick about breastfeeding!
Whitney Nielson Thompson via Facebook
I had a horrible time fighting the nurses when my 9pound, 4oince daughter was born! Idiotic nurses were thrusting me with possible calls to CPS and demanding that I bottle feed ridiculous amounts of formula…..all while my daughter was successfully nursing. I ultimately lied and said that I was giving ‘X’ amount of formula through the SNS, which I had to demand….my daughter’s ‘low’ sugar levels regulated with round the clock nursing and we went home ahead of ‘schedule’….. No hospital births for me again, EVER!
Natalie Hunt via Facebook
The same thing happened to me 5 years ago when I had my daughter. She took to breastfeeding but after getting a bottle it was a two week battle to get her to breastfeed again. After four months of struggeling, I gave up and put my baby on formula. I was not as informed back then as I am now.