Pills To Stop Breast Milk In South Africa

What Are Pills To Stop Breast Milk?

Whether to breastfeed or not is a very personal decision. If you’re a mom-to-be or have just given birth and won’t be breastfeeding, or if you’ve been breastfeeding and have decided to stop, you’ll have one challenge to deal with: Before your body realizes it no longer needs to produce milk and stops lactating, it’s quite likely your breasts will become engorged.

Breast engorgement isn’t pleasant. The breasts can become rock-hard and very tender to the touch. Usually, these symptoms disappear after a few days without any treatment. But in the meantime, the pain can be excruciating and even increase the risk of mastitis, an infection that results from bacteria in a clogged milk duct. If you’re in a hurry to get back to normal, there are medications that can dry up breast milk.

Taking drugs such as Cabergoline or Dostinex® to stop breast milk works best for mothers who have not been breastfeeding for long. Talk to your doctor, midwife, or nurse about these drugs.

Suppose you need to stop nursing your baby immediately. In that case, you can use an automatic or semi-automatic electric breast pump or hand expression to relieve discomfort while you decrease your milk production. This will mean the hormonal changes are more gradual.

Pills To Stop Breast Milk In South Africa?

How Effective Is Stop Breast Milk Pills?

Breastfeeding works through supply and demand. The more milk you take out of your breasts, the more milk you make. If there is milk left inside the breast, our body regulates itself thanks to a protein called Feedback Inhibitor of Lactation (FIL), which is in charge of managing the production. The more of this hormone comes out with the milk when the baby feeds or when you pump, the more milk is produced. And on the other hand, the more FIL remains inside, the less milk the mammary gland will produce.

So the best way is to remove gradually less and less milk from your breasts. If one of your breasts (or both) bothers you, express a little milk just to get comfortable, but always leave some milk inside. You have to remove the minimum amount that will help you not to feel pain but that at the same time allows the gland to understand that it must reduce production. It is a fairly intuitive process and each mother will find out for herself how much milk she needs to express to feel comfortable while continuing to decrease production. There will be a time when you will know that your breasts no longer need this continuous emptying and so it will be time to stop.