Sunday, February 16, 2014

Can i not get pregnant breastfeeding, even with a period?




Casey Pitt


I know breastfeeding can help prevent you from getting pregnant, i have two little girls and breastfed them both. With both i had a very regular period. every 30 days. I was not usong any method of birth control at all and had plenty of unprotected sex ( me and my hubby want our kids close in age ) i stopped breastfeeding my oldest when she was 9 months old. 1 month later i was pregnant. my sister also had regular periods while breastfeeding, she stopped breastfeeding and got pregnant 1 month later. so i guess my question is, did breast feeding keep me from getting pregnant, even though i had a normal period or did i just happen 2 get pregnant the month after my daughter was weanted. i stoped nursing my youngest 2 months ago so hoping im pregnant this month! thanks in advance!


Answer
If you were getting regular periods, then it's almost certain that you were ovulating and it was likely a coincidence that you got pregnant after you stopped breastfeeding. Most of the time, no ovulation means you are either not getting periods or you have very irregular, almost continuous bleeding / spotting throughout the month.

Breastfeeding and getting pregnant?




Riyen's


Does anyone know the chances of getting pregnant while breastfeeding with no other protection?
oh so you dont get pregnant because you dont have a period?



Answer
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactational_amenorrhea_method
Breastfeeding infertility

For women who meet the criteria (listed below), LAM is 98% effective during the first six months postpartum.[1]

* Breastfeeding must be the infantâs only (or almost only) source of nutrition. Feeding formula, pumping instead of nursing[2], and feeding solids all reduce the effectiveness of LAM.
* The infant must breastfeed at least every four hours during the day and at least every six hours at night.
* The infant must be less than six months old.
* The woman must not have had a period after 56 days post-partum (when determining fertility, bleeding prior to 56 days post-partum can be ignored).

Ecological breastfeeding is a stricter form of LAM developed by Sheila Kippley, one of the founders of the Couple to Couple League. Studies have shown it has a 1% failure rate in the first six months postpartum, and a 6% failure rate before the womanâs first postpartum menstruation.[3][4] The Seven Standards of ecological breastfeeding are slightly different from the LAM criteria:

* Breastfeeding must be the infantâs only source of nutrition â no formula, no pumping, and (if the infant is less than six months old) no solids.
* The infant must be pacified at the breast, not with pacifiers or bottles
* The infant must be breastfed often. The standards for LAM are a bare minimum; more frequency is better. Scheduling of feedings should be avoided.
* Mothers must sleep with their infants â in the same room, if not in the same bed.
* Mothers must not be separated from their infants for more than three hours a day.
* Mothers must take daily naps with their infants.
* The woman must not have had a period after 56 days post-partum (bleeding prior to 56 days post-partum can be ignored).


http://www.kellymom.com/bf/normal/fertility.html#prevent
How can I use breastfeeding to prevent pregnancy?

The Exclusive Breastfeeding method of birth control is also called the Lactational Amenorrhea Method of birth control, or LAM. Lactational amenorrhea refers to the natural postpartum infertility that occurs when a woman is not menstruating due to breastfeeding. Many mothers receive conflicting information on the subject of breastfeeding and fertility.

Myth #1 â Breastfeeding cannot be relied upon to prevent pregnancy.

Myth #2 â Any amount of breastfeeding will prevent pregnancy, regardless of the frequency of breastfeeding or whether momâs period has returned.

Exclusive breastfeeding has in fact been shown to be an excellent form of birth control, but there are certain criteria that must be met for breastfeeding to be used effectively.

Exclusive breastfeeding (by itself) is 98-99.5% effective in preventing pregnancy as long as all of the following conditions are met:

1. Your baby is less than six months old
2. Your menstrual periods have not yet returned
3. Baby is breastfeeding on cue (both day & night), and gets nothing but breastmilk or only token amounts of other foods.


[...]

How can I maximize my natural period of infertility?

Timing for the return to fertility varies greatly from woman to woman and depends upon baby's nursing pattern and how sensitive mom's body is to the hormones involved in lactation.

* Breastfeeding frequency and total amount of time spent breastfeeding per 24 hours are the strongest factors leading to the return of fertility: a mother is more likely to see the return of fertility if baby's nursing frequency and/or duration is reduced, particularly if the change is abrupt.
* In some populations, research has shown that night nursing slows the return to fertility.
* One study showed that mothers who were separated from their infants (but expressed milk to provide 100% breastmilk for baby) had a higher pregnancy risk (5.2%) during the first 6 months (Valdes 2000).
* The introduction of solid food can also be a factor in the return of fertility. Once baby starts solids (if mom's cycles have not returned), the natural period of infertility may be prolonged by breastfeeding before offering solids, starting solids gradually, and not restricting nursing.

You can achieve higher effectiveness by practicing ecological breastfeeding:

* keeping baby close
* breastfeeding on cue (day and night)
* using breastfeeding to comfort your baby
* breastfeeding in a lying-down position for naps and at night
* using no bottles or pacifiers

If you practice ecological breastfeeding:

* Chance of pregnancy is practically zero during the first three months, less than 2% between 3 and 6 months, and about 6% after 6 months (assuming mom's menstrual periods have not yet returned).
* The average time for the return of menstrual periods is 14.6 months.
* Moms whose cycles return early tend to be infertile for the first few cycles. Moms whose cycles return later are more likely to ovulate before their first period.
Source: Natural Child Spacing and Breastfeeding by Jen O'Quinn



The Effectiveness Of Natural Family Planning
http://ccli.org/nfp/basics/effectiveness-p04.php

http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0010782497000401
Data were entered and cleaned on-site and further cleaned and analyzed at IRH, using country-level and pooled data to produce descriptive statistics and life tables. The 98+ % efficacy of LAM is confirmed in a wide variety of settings. In addition, the results yield insight on the possibility of continued use beyond 6 months. LAM is found to be highly effective as an i

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