’Breast feeding is hard for autistic mums and here's why'
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New parents always remember the moment where you're discharged from the hospital, get home and suddenly realise it's just you and your baby and that sudden realisation of "now what do we do". But those feelings of confusion, isolation, and sometimes distress are even more acute for autistic mums as they navigate motherhood.
Kathryn Williams, remembers finding even the set up of a maternity ward distressing. Then when she had her first baby, poor coordination made the tasks which fill almost all hours of those early days - the nappy changes and breastfeeding - particularly hard
“I had very poor coordination after I gave birth. All parts of having a new born can be far more difficult for autistic women than I think it is for the average new parent, so even changing nappies I found incredibly difficult."
Take the example of not realising you need to go to the toilet until the last minute," Kathryn explained. "People say surely you must know a bit’ and the reply to that this ‘genuinely no, not at all’. So I think that not being believed is a big problem”
Kathryn, now 36, only found out she was autistic after she’d had her two children. She is now director of Autistic UK, an Autistic led advocacy group and a student at Cardiff University. Research from Autistic UK and Swansea University, working with the University of Kent has found that breastfeeding support from midwives and health visitors is often not well suited to meet the needs of autistic women.
Those sorts of things also apply to breastfeeding. So when your milk releases, the average woman will feel that that's coming out and it won't be a very intense feeling, but they'll know but some autistic people don't know that their milk is releasing, and others felt it's so strongly that it was actually really unpleasant.”
Dr Grant added: “Another major thing is the sensory environment around autistic people is felt quite intensely a lot of the time. So the feeling of having your baby's body skin to skin, being all hot, and wiggly, and all of those sorts of things that little babies do, could be really uncomfortable.”
Dr Grant said: "It is widely acknowledged that breastfeeding support in the NHS is woefully inadequate; due to severe underfunding and a shortage of over 10,000 midwives, it is not possible for most mothers to receive the support they need to meet their breastfeeding goals. We know that in the UK mothers who are younger and from low income backgrounds tend to breastfeed less, but there is less recognition of factors like neurodivergence. This review has highlighted that there is an urgent need for maternity and infant feeding services to accommodate the needs of autistic mothers."
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman