Clinical Questions List
Breastfeeding or Human Milk for Painful Procedures Among Newborns

CQ #283 - September 4, 2023

by Anne Eglash MD, IBCLC, FABM

#LactFact

Breastfeeding is an effective strategy to control pain for newborns undergoing minor painful procedures.

Breastfeeding or breast milk for procedural pain in neonates (Review)
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2023, Issue 8. Art. No.: CD004950
Does breastfeeding or human milk feeding reduce pain among newborn infants who undergo minor painful procedures?

Many studies have been published regarding the effect of either breastfeeding or providing expressed breastmilk on controlling pain among newborns during painful procedures such as heel lance, venipuncture, intramuscular injection, adhesive tape removal, or eye exam.

The Cochrane Library conducts systematic reviews of published research data to help determine whether there is sufficient evidence for an intervention or procedure to be incorporated into clinical practice.

This Cochrane review found 66 studies that were either randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or quasi-RCTs on the effect of breastfeeding (36 studies) or supplemental breastmilk (29 studies) on pain among term or preterm infants undergoing painful minor procedures. One study compared direct breastfeeding with supplemental human milk.

The authors concluded that moderate-/low-certainty evidence suggests that breastfeeding or supplemental human milk may reduce pain among newborns during minor procedures, as compared to several interventions such as holding, non-pharmacologic interventions, or placebo.

But there is more- see the question!

What do you think are accurate statements regarding the effect of breastfeeding or supplemental breastmilk on pain among newborns undergoing minor procedures? Choose 1 or more:
  1. Duration of crying is the gold standard for measuring pain among newborns.
  2. This review found evidence that breastfeeding a newborn during a painful procedure increases the risk of breast refusal due to the association between breastfeeding and experiencing pain.
  3. Moderate concentrations of glucose/sucrose may have similar effectiveness to breastfeeding, in the reduction of pain for neonates during minor procedures.
  4. Bottle feeding breastmilk is equally effective for pain control as compared to direct breastfeeding among newborns undergoing minor painful procedures.

Click here to view the answer to this question.

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