Kangaroo Mother Care:
Restoring the Original Paradigm for Infant Care and Breastfeeding
Lisa Albright
Austin TX USA
From: LEAVEN, Vol. 37
No. 5, October-November 2001, pp. 106-107.
Nils Bergman is a public
health physician and medical superintendent at Mowbray Maternity Hospital
in Cape Town, South Africa. He has extensive experience with kangaroo
care in a hospital setting. By putting breastfeeding into a biological,
evolutionary, and anthropological context, he defined what he termed
an "original" paradigm for infant care and breastfeeding. He also described
how kangaroo care fits this original paradigm and the role that health
care technology should play in the care of premature infants.
Dr. Bergman began by defining
for us the term paradigm: a set of basic assumptions, a worldview, or
a belief system. He emphasized that a paradigm is determined by things
such as tradition, culture, and experience more than science or research.
By looking at commonalities of breastfeeding behavior in all mammals,
an "original" paradigm for infant care and breastfeeding can be extrapolated,
as opposed to one based on current cultural traditions.
To develop an original paradigm,
Dr. Bergman referred to biologists' concept of "habitat and niche."
The niche refers to behaviors related to four basic needs - oxygen,
warmth, nutrition and protection - which must be met through the habitat.
Dr. Bergman summarized research that indicates that the human newborn's
natural habitat is maternal-infant skin-to-skin contact. All newborn
mammals that have been studied exhibit a sequence of behaviors that
leads to the initiation of breastfeeding. The newborn's actions elicit
a set of care-taking responses from the mother. He emphasized that breastfeeding
is a niche, or set of preprogrammed behaviors, which the mammalian newborn
exhibits that are appropriate for its habitat. Thus in the newborn habitat,
the newborn gets oxygen through the air, warmth and protection through
skin-to-skin contact with the mother, and nourishment through breastfeeding.
The neonatal attachment process
is easily disturbed. Separation of the newborn from its mother causes
"protest-despair behavior," which involves stress hormones, the adrenergic
(sympathetic) nervous system, and certain somatic or muscular behaviors.
The protest response involves distress cries and other behaviors that
indicate the newborn recognizes he is in the wrong habitat. The despair
response involves withdrawal, a slowed heart rate, and lower body temperature
along with increases in stress hormones, presumably as a means of prolonging
survival outside the habitat. Once the newborn is restored to its correct
habitat (the mother), heart rate and temperature rises, and stress hormones
are reduced. Thus the habitat-niche concept requires a paradigm whereby
the mother and infant are seen as a dyad. Dr. Bergman added, "Breastfeeding's
worst enemy is separation."
Anthropologists theorize
humans appear to be born about one year "too early." For many mammals,
brain size at birth is about 80 percent of adult size, whereas that
of humans is about 25 percent. Humans don't achieve 80 percent of adult
brain size until approximately 21 months gestational age or 12 months
postpartum. It has been suggested that this is an evolutionary compromise
to the narrowed pelvic structure of humans as they began walking on
two legs: the human newborn completes its gestational brain growth outside
of the womb. The correct habitat or place for this is being in skin-to-skin
contact with the mother, with breastfeeding providing the human milk
that is uniquely adapted to the needs of the human infant's "immaturity."
Up to a point, prematurity can be thought of as an early transition
to a habitat that is already designed to cope with human infants' immaturity.
Four
Types of Mammalian Care Patterns:
Cache-feeds
about every 12 hours
Nest-feeds
about every four hours
Follow-feeds
about every two hours
Carry-feeds
about every 30 minutes, or nearly continuously
|
Dr. Bergman also went through
the anthropological evidence and arguments that human babies should
be cared for by what is called "carry care," a theme shared in James
McKenna's luncheon talk the same day ("The Society Who Mistook Their
Children For Bats? A Bio-Cultural Perspective on Human Infancy and Parenting").
This includes almost continuous carrying of the infant, cosleeping of
mother and infant, immediate nurturant response, frequent to continuous
feeding, and breastfeeding for a period of two years or more. It is
only relatively recent in our history that care patterns in Western
society have evolved away from "carry care" to one of "cache care,"
where the infant is left lying still, feedings are scheduled, typical
of "nesting care," and infants are expected to sleep alone. Dr. Bergman
argues that it is the current paradigm of separation of the infant from
its mother that has turned prematurity from an early habitat transition
into a disease state.
Providing the optimal habitat
is even more essential for premature babies than for full term, albeit
immature, babies, according to Dr. Bergman. Kangaroo mother care is
a practice that provides the natural habitat for newborns. It has significantly
improved survival rates for premature infants in many settings. A general
definition of kangaroo mother care includes three main components: skin-to-skin
contact, breastfeeding, and support. The form of support is variable,
depending upon the context. For a full-term infant, support could be
provided by the father, family, or health care workers, who ensure that
there is no separation of mother and infant and that breastfeeding can
take place. For premature infants, support may include advanced health
care technology. He emphasized that technological support should be
in addition to what he called "humanity," maintenance of the mother-infant
dyad, not a replacement for humanity. In his experience, infants more
than 32 weeks gestational age do well without advanced technology using
kangaroo mother care.
We saw a live demonstration
of how babies are worn by "kangarooing" mothers in Cape Town. The baby,
wearing only a diaper, is literally tied onto the mother's bare chest
with a strip of cloth that is positioned underneath the baby's ear.
This extends the baby's head and neck and prevents obstructive apnea.
The mother than wears a special shirt that wraps around and under the
baby's bottom to induce flexion, as in utero. The baby is tied tightly
enough so that when the mother breathes, she pushes against the baby's
chest and stimulates his breathing. Inside the mother's shirt, the baby
is in a carbon dioxide-rich environment, which also stimulates breathing.
The strip is relaxed every two hours and the baby is fed via breast
or whatever means is necessary. For premature babies, this type of kangaroo
care is done around the clock. Mothers of premature babies are also
encouraged to sleep at a 30 degree angle; this aids breathing and vestibular
function.
Since kangaroo mother care
fulfills the original paradigm, Dr. Bergman said it is appropriate for
full-term infants as well. He is researching how long kangaroo care
is needed for newborns, but speculates that about six hours after birth
may be long enough for the baby to stabilize physiologically, and to
initiate the maternal care response. He also suggests that around six
weeks of age the baby may be ready to move beyond the neonatal habitat
of mother's chest in skin-to-skin contact. Usually by then the baby
has better head control, breastfeeding is established, and the mother
is recovered from the birth.
Dr. Bergman concluded by
expanding the habitat theory to humans as they develop from infancy
to adulthood, with their habitat expanding from mother's chest, to being
carried, to home, to village or community, country, and the world. Thank
you, Dr. Bergman, for an interesting and informative talk
Lisa Albright is an Area
Leaders' Letter Administrator for the Eastern US Division and was a
Leader for five years in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. She recently
relocated to Austin, Texas, USA, with her husband, David McDonough,
and their two boys, Colin (11) and Kevin (8).
Page last edited Sun Oct 14 09:31:58 UTC 2007.
