The truth is neither weight gain nor weight loss can be attributed to breastfeeding alone. A range of factors are responsible for your postpartum weight, including the types of foods you're eating, the total number of calories you're consuming, as well as your age, metabolic rate, activity level and cortisol levels.
Prolactin levels while breastfeeding, and the high cortisol that comes with sleep deprivation and taking care of a new baby, are two of those unique factors. They basically make it a lot harder than normal to tap into your body fat reserves, while simultaneously making you more hungry.
Storage of milk depends on the temperature. Many people like to think of the rule of 4's: 4 hours at room temperature; 4 days in the refrigerator; 4 months in a refrigerator freezer with a separate door.
Weight Loss in Lactation
Tips for losing weight
The most difficult times to breastfeed are the first few days after birth, the 3 to 6-month week, and teething time. Learning to combine breastfeeding and pumping can help with your milk supply and ensure your bub gets the nutrition they need.
As a general rule, exclusive pumpers need 120 minutes per day of quality breast stimulation with a hospital strength pump to maintain milk supply.
She adds that if you're exclusively breastfeeding, you could burn around 500 to 700 calories a day. But if you're breastfeeding part-time, you might only burn 250 to 400 calories a day.
If you're gaining weight while breastfeeding, you're not alone - and it doesn't mean you're doing anything wrong. Breastfeeding isn't a guaranteed fat-burner, and many other factors (sleep, stress, hormones, thyroid health) play a role.
A sustainable and healthy rate of weight loss during this time is about one to two pounds (0.5-1 kg) per week. You can realistically expect to lose around 20 to 30 pounds (9 to 14 kg) by six months postpartum, depending on your pre-pregnancy weight, overall health, and lifestyle choices.
Frequently cited problems with breastfeeding include sore nipples, engorged breasts, mastitis, leaking milk, pain, and failure to latch on by the infant. Women who encounter these problems early on are less likely to continue to breastfeed unless they get professional assistance.
The average cumulative weight loss at 6 months post‐partum was 2.561 kg (SD 4.585), increasing at 12 months (3.066 kg; SD 5.098) and decreasing at 18 months (1.993 kg; SD 5.340), being 1.353 kg (SD, 5.574) at 24 months post‐partum.
Your slower metabolism will slow your weight loss, even if you eat the same number of calories that helped you lose weight. When the calories you burn equal the calories you eat, you reach a plateau. To lose more weight, you need to either increase your physical activity or decrease the calories you eat.
Not seeing the scale move even though you're working out and eating healthy is common. The most likely reason for this is that you're putting on muscle mass while you're losing fat. Muscle is denser than fat, so even if you weigh the same, your body becomes leaner and more toned.
But for breastfeeding moms, too little fuel can backfire in two big ways: Milk supply may dip. Your body prioritizes milk production, so if it senses a calorie shortage, it will slow fat loss before it risks reducing milk output. Metabolism slows.
A few effective diet changes, exercise, stress management, sleeping habits, and even supplements can speed up your metabolism, but we recommend addressing the problem at the source — your hormones. Hormones affect metabolism, insulin resistance, diet, cortisol, activity levels, and weight gain after pregnancy.
Since a breast pump mimics a baby sucking at the breast, your body responds similarly when it comes to the metabolic response. But while both pumping and breastfeeding burn calories, breastfeeding tends to be more efficient and therefore moms who breastfeed do it more often, burning more calories in the long run.
The American Academy of Pediatrics and the World Health Organization recommend continued breastfeeding along with introducing appropriate complementary foods for up to 2 years or longer.
But here's the truth: Exclusively pumping is one of the most physically demanding, emotionally draining, and selfless ways to feed a baby. You're not just washing bottles like formula-feeding moms. You're scrubbing pump parts multiple times a day. You're not snuggled up, nursing skin-to-skin.
The length of a breastfeed varies a lot between babies and also throughout the day. It is normal for a breastfeed to last anywhere between 5 minutes and 40 minutes, or sometimes a little longer.
The 'golden hour' is a term used to describe the first hour after birth. This is a crucial time when mother and baby share their first intimate moments, initiating a bond that is not only emotional but also has significant health benefits. It is during this hour that the first breastfeeding usually occurs.
Coco Austin defended her choice to breastfeed her and husband Ice-T's daughter Chanel, now 9, until she was 6 years old, saying it was an opportunity to bond.
Big Kids and Tweens (8 to 9 Years)
It makes sense: This is the age when children's brains and bodies begin to change. Puberty typically starts as early as age 8 for girls and age 9 for boys. 7 As a result, kids this age often feel torn between the little-kid and big-kid worlds.