Sabtu, 26 Maret 2016

loose skin after pregnancy weight loss


Im super excited about MITs upcoming "Make the Breast Pump Not Suck" Hackathon. Its a collaboration of 150 experts--from parents to engineers--working to improve/hack/reinvent the breast pump.

If you have suggestions for improving breast pumps, MIT is actively soliciting input. Please participate!

Heres what I submitted:

Mom of 4 breastfed babies...I never pumped for them, but I did pump and donate to other moms.

Im sure youve already received lots of comments about the noise, about how the pump flanges have to be held just so to get the suction right, making replacement parts cheap and easily available, making pumps simple and easy to clean (the Ameda Purely Yours has been the simplest design out there from the pumps Ive tried) about how its awkward having these flanges and collection bottles sticking out...

The the biggest thing Id like to see is something that actually replicates the *feel and motion* of a babys mouth. Breast pumps work by suction to pull the milk out of the breast. But a nursing baby has entirely different mechanics. The babys mouth creates suction, but what actually expresses the milk out of the breast is the rolling motion of the babys tongue on the underside of the breast (relative to the babys mouth)--NOT suction. That is the biggest flaw in all breast pumps. They dont replicate a babys mouth, and hands-down a baby is more effective than a machine in triggering let-down and in expressing milk.

A
breastpump needs not only adjustable suction levels, but also adjustable pump cycles. When a baby nurses, it starts with fast, short sucks until the milk starts to let down. Then the baby moves to long, deep, slower sucks. This cycle repeats several times while the baby nurses.

Ive used several pumps, including a Medela double electric, an Ameda Purely Yours, a Hygeia EnJoye, and more. Some had adjustable cycle speeds, but even those often wouldnt go fast enough for my preferences. I found that I need at least 78 cycles/minute for optimal letdown, maybe even faster for triggering letdown. Many pumps max out at 36-60 cycles/minute, which is way too slow for me.

Another essential design element: a sealed system. The Ameda and Hygeia have sealed systems, which means that bacteria/mold/viruses cant enter the motor housing via the pump tubes and then reinfect the milk. Amedas design used a simple silicone diaphragm. The Medela does not have a sealed system.

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