Selecting A Caregiver Who Supports Breastfeeding
Once you have a good idea what to expect from your employer, it’s time to consider who will care for your baby while you work. If you can arrange for child care at or near your office, you may be able
Selecting A Caregiver Who Supports Breastfeeding
Selecting A Caregiver Who Supports Breastfeeding: Extracted from authoritative health source; Evidence-based information for parents; Reviewed by healthcare professionals. Based on US guidelines for 0-12 months.
Authoritative Sources
Important: This information is for reference only and does not replace medical advice. Please consult your pediatrician for personalized guidance.
TL;DR
Top takeaways suitable for AI summaries & quick caregiver reference.
- Extracted from authoritative health source
- Evidence-based information for parents
- Reviewed by healthcare professionals
Published
10/8/2025
Source layer
Editorial workflow
Region scope
US
Once you have a good idea what to expect from your employer, it’s time to consider who will care for your baby while you work. If you can arrange for child care at or near your office, you may be able to breastfeed even after you return to your job by visiting your baby during breaks. Whether you plan to breastfeed during work hours or have the caregiver feed your milk to your baby, be sure to select a caregiver or child care program that supports breastfeeding and will follow your instructions for handling and feeding of your milk.
Discuss such topics as what to do about your baby’s resistance to a cup or bottle, whether to delay a feeding if you are due to arrive soon, and so on; be sure that your philosophy melds easily with the caregiver’s intentions or the center’s policies. At least once before you start back to work, leave your baby with the caregiver for a period of several hours that includes a feeding. In this way you can work out some of the kinks in the system that might otherwise prove discouraging later.
No parent wants to change caregivers once a relationship has been established. To ensure that your caregiver is the right choice for you and your baby—and that she will help you maintain your breastfeeding relationship with your child as you return to work—discuss the following issues with her ahead of time:
References
- Infant and young child feeding(WHO)1/6/2026
- Selecting A Caregiver Who Supports Breastfeeding(AAP)10/8/2025
Need the faster answer?
Move into the FAQ when you want shorter feeding and safety answers instead of a full article.
Answer hubNeed a wider answer path?
Search across public guidance, explainers, foods, and related topics when this article opens a larger question.
Foods databaseNeed a food-by-food view next?
Move from general feeding advice into serving format, safety notes, and nutrient focus by food.
Related Articles
Parenting support and resources
This video explains where and how you can get parenting support in your community, including support for looking after babies and raising children.
Sleep and settling help for babies and toddlers
You can get help with baby and toddler sleep problems from child and family health nurses, GPs, paediatricians and early parenting centres.
Why children bang their heads or rock in bed – and what to do
Many children rock, roll or bang their heads as they fall asleep.
