{"id":67592,"date":"2023-09-16T10:21:55","date_gmt":"2023-09-16T10:21:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celeband.com\/?p=67592"},"modified":"2023-09-16T10:21:55","modified_gmt":"2023-09-16T10:21:55","slug":"no-one-taught-me-how-to-properly-breastfeed-my-twins-they-ended-up-in-ae","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celeband.com\/lifestyle\/no-one-taught-me-how-to-properly-breastfeed-my-twins-they-ended-up-in-ae\/","title":{"rendered":"No one taught me how to properly breastfeed my twins – they ended up in A&E"},"content":{"rendered":"
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At five days old,\u00a0both of\u00a0<\/strong>my\u00a0twin<\/strong>\u00a0babies were admitted into a paediatric ward because they were really sick.\u00a0<\/p>\n Particularly the smaller of the two boys, Conor \u2013 he was so dehydrated that his kidneys weren\u2019t functioning properly.\u00a0<\/p>\n I\u2019d struggled to feed them, and they were barely conscious when we arrived at A&E. It was horrible to be a new parent and to see your children at the hospital so poorly.<\/p>\n You feel incredible guilt that you\u2019re doing everything wrong \u2013 that you\u2019re not cut out for parenthood.<\/p>\n What followed was years of feeling anxious and overwhelmed as a parent, which is why I\u2019m calling for the Government to provide every child under five with a baby and toddler guarantee,\u00a0which would set out and ensure the basic services \u2013 like expert advice and extra support \u2013 that every young child in the UK is entitled to.<\/p>\n I had my beautiful twin boys in February 2020, at the start of the pandemic, aged 34. They were my first children, and I felt completely unprepared.<\/p>\n In the run-up to having them, I felt quite supported by my husband, family and friends but everything went wrong for me on postnatal wards. Staff were completely overrun.<\/p>\n Everybody that I saw in the hospital was always really nice, but I got the distinct feeling that they were rushed off their feet. That there were never enough of them.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Like most new mums, I had no idea what I was doing and I felt like nobody told me what I was supposed to do. No amount of reading can prepare you for going from no children, to two children.<\/p>\n I found that support in the hospital was only to check on the health of my babies, and not mine.\u00a0<\/p>\n I didn\u2019t feel assisted with breastfeeding\u00a0because\u00a0I\u00a0<\/strong>wasn\u2019t checked over to make sure that my babies were feeding properly. As a result, they weren\u2019t.<\/p>\n When I was first sent home \u2013 three days after they were born \u2013 I was terrified and didn\u2019t sleep. I just stared at them wondering what on earth to do and how and when to feed them.\u00a0<\/p>\n I really feel like if there was a healthcare professional available to talk me through how to feed both of my babies at once, it could have prevented what happened to my boys.\u00a0<\/p>\n Since then, I\u2019ve learned that many parents like me across the UK are struggling and not getting the postpartum help they need and that it could have a huge impact on their children\u2019s health and futures.<\/p>\n When my boys were ill, I felt so low, and my depression was completely dismissed by healthcare professionals<\/p>\n A UNICEF UK survey of parents across the country with children aged zero to four years found that 70% of parents feel like it\u2019s getting harder to be a parent in Britain because of the rising cost-of-living, access to affordable childcare, less time to spend with their children and reduced local services.\u00a0Troublingly, 66% said they were worried about their child\u2019s future life chances.<\/p>\n For me, I feel like having no assistance after giving birth was the catalyst for a lengthy battle with postnatal and clinical depression, as well as constant feelings of inadequacy.<\/p>\n Turns out I\u2019m not alone, either.<\/p>\n The charity\u2019s survey also found that 61% of parents have struggled with their mental health since becoming a parent.\u00a0<\/p>\n When my boys were ill, I felt so low, and my depression was completely dismissed by healthcare professionals. The only thing that anybody really seemed to care about were the babies who, after a couple of weeks with help from the doctors, came on leaps and bounds.<\/p>\n I felt that I was just constantly falling by the wayside. And in March 2020, when the boys were a month old, we went into lockdown. I couldn\u2019t speak to a GP, and it took a long time for my mental health to recover.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n If I\u2019m perfectly honest, I don\u2019t think it fully has.\u00a0<\/p>\n I still suffer a lot with anxiety, and I think it stems from that 18-month period where things were incredibly bad.<\/p>\n If there had been someone who could have spent 20 minutes with me at the beginning \u2013 just 20 minutes \u2013 long enough to help me feed both boys at once, I feel like it would have changed the whole course of motherhood for me.\u00a0<\/p>\n I had such an awful time of it that I will resolutely never have another child. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind I will never put myself through the experience of postnatal and postpartum ever again.\u00a0<\/p>\n It has shaped the way I view myself as a mother, and it\u2019s taken me a long time to even accept the fact that maybe I am OK at it. But for the first 18 months of my children\u2019s lives, I definitely didn\u2019t think that.<\/p>\n Thankfully, now, they\u2019re doing really well. They\u2019re healthy, but things could have been so different.<\/p>\n Stories like mine are why UNICEF UK is calling on the UK Government to introduce a National Baby and Toddler Guarantee.\u00a0That means face-to-face appointments and speaking to health professionals that parents and carers can trust, as well as affordable nurseries and mental health support.<\/p>\n This would mean families would know what help they should receive and can access the right services for their baby\u2019s health, well-being and early education \u2013 right from the start.<\/p>\n For me, it would have changed everything.<\/p>\n Emma is supporting UNICEF\u2019s Early Moments Matter campaign. For more information and to sign the petition,\u00a0<\/em>visit their website here<\/em>.<\/em><\/p>\n Do you have a story you\u2019d like to share? Get in touch by emailing jess.austin@metro.co.uk.\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n