What to do if your child doesn’t latch on to the breast

A child’s failure to latch on to breastmilk can be caused by dairy feeding, anorexia, and other factors, which can be addressed by minimizing bottle-feeding, adjusting the method, and adopting the correct feeding position to acclimate the child to latch on to breastmilk.
The child does not suck the breastmilk need to pay attention to minimize the bottle feeding, especially the newborn baby. Mothers should promptly correct the child’s nipple illusion and, if necessary, allow the child to starve appropriately, so that the child will take the initiative to breastfeed. A child who is at the age of three or four months and shows more aversion to breastfeeding can be helped to accept breastfeeding according to the baby’s behavior in order to adapt to his/her needs.
In addition, it is necessary to patiently help the baby learn the correct position for sucking the nipple so that the baby’s face faces the nipple and the baby’s head, shoulders and buttocks are in a straight line so that the baby sucks the breast in a comfortable position.
If the child does not suck the breastmilk, you need to consult a doctor in time to rule out the cause of the disease, if it is a pathological cause, you need to be guided by a doctor in time to regulate the treatment.