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Despite My Disease
Breastfeeding With Chronic Illnesses By Shel Franco
An emotional discomfort that fewer people seem to think about is what happens to the breastfeeding relationship when mothers are hospitalized. An emergency forced DeLuca to stay in the hospital, but she did not let that stop her breastfeeding relationship. "As soon as I was off the respirator but still in ICU, I explained to [the nurses] that I had a 6-week-old baby and needed a breast pump, because I didn't want my milk to dry up while in the hospital," she says. As a result, the hospital staff contacted DeLuca's pulmonologist, and a breast pump was brought to her that same day.
But for some women, the benefits may be simply personal. A study in the British Medical Journal suggests that breastfeeding mothers who are also insulin dependent diabetics undergo insulin reductions that are significantly greater than their bottle-feeding counterparts.
And diabetes might not be the only disease that is positively affected by breastfeeding; it is DeLuca's belief that the hormones secreted during breastfeeding actually improved her asthma. "My doctor said it was possible that he had seen pregnancy and breastfeeding both improve and worsen asthma," she says


