Abstract
The infant feeding patterns at the time of first ovulation after childbirth were determined in a longitudinal study of twenty-seven mothers who chose to breast feed their babies. Fourteen mothers suppressed ovulation throughout lactation and thirteen ovulated while still breast feeding. Those who ovulated while breast feeding had all introduced two or more supplementary feeds/day, reduced suckling frequency to less than six times/day and reduced suckling duration to less than 60 min/day at the time of first ovulation. Basal PRL levels had fallen to below 600 microunits/l in all but one of the mothers at first ovulation. Those mothers who suppressed ovulation for more than 40 weeks post-partum (late ovulation group) were compared with those who ovulated between 30 and 40 weeks post-partum (middle group) and with those who ovulated before 30 weeks post-partum (early group). The late ovulation group breast-fed for longest, suckled most intensively, maintained night feeds for longest and introduced supplementary feeds most gradually. This study suggests suckling may be the most important factor inhibiting the return of ovulation during lactation and that policies which encourage increased suckling frequency and duration will maximize the contraceptive effects of breast feeding.
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