Mum4Mum - Breastfeeding Support, Westport

Mum4Mum - Breastfeeding Support, Westport Mum4Mum Breastfeeding Supporters are a group of Mothers passionate about Supporting and Encouraging Mums through their Breastfeeding experience

The aim of the Mum4Mum Breastfeeding Supporters service is for breastfeeding mothers to feel satisfied and supported with their breastfeeding. Mum4Mum Breastfeeding Supporters, called “Mum4Mums”, have been described as being “knowledgeable friends”. A Mum4Mum - has had some personal breastfeeding experience,

- has had training with the West Coast Primary Health Organisation,

- and wants to su

pport other women to breastfeed. Mum4Mums work voluntarily, so sometimes they may not be available, but they are happy to help you find an alternative Mum4Mum. Mum4Mums have a wide range of personal experience including being Teenage breastfeeding mums, to being older first time parents. Some Mum4Mums have breastfed twins or breastfed following Caesarian birth; some have had experience with sore ni***es, engorgement, mastitis, or other breastfeeding problems. Some Mum4Mums didn’t breastfeed their first babies but succeeded with their next babies; some have tandem fed (breastfed a new baby and an older child); and some Mum4Mums have breastfed babies with food allergies. Mum4Mums can meet with you during pregnancy to talk about breastfeeding before your baby is born, or they can meet and support you after your baby is born. Mum4Mums will treat your information confidentially, but may discuss concerns with a Lactation Consultant.

16/10/2025

In 1952, inside a New York City delivery room, a baby was born blue and silent. Doctors hesitated, unsure whether to keep trying. Then a calm voice broke through the panic.
“Let’s score the baby,” said Dr. Virginia Apgar.

That moment changed medicine forever.

Apgar had once dreamed of being a surgeon, but in the 1940s few women were allowed into the operating room. Told that no hospital would hire her, she turned to anesthesiology instead — a decision that would save millions of lives.

Working in Columbia-Presbyterian’s maternity ward, she saw newborns die within minutes of birth because doctors had no system to judge which babies needed help first. So one morning in 1952, she grabbed a pen and paper and designed a five-point test measuring heart rate, breathing, muscle tone, reflex response, and skin color. She called it the Apgar Score.

The idea spread faster than anyone expected. Within a decade, almost every hospital in America was using it. Infant mortality fell sharply. Doctors finally had a language for newborn care — and babies once thought lost were suddenly being saved.

Apgar never stopped pushing forward. She earned a public health degree, joined the March of Dimes, and became a global voice for mothers and infants. When asked how she had thrived in a man’s world, she laughed, “Women are like tea bags — they don’t know how strong they are until they’re in hot water.”

Dr. Virginia Apgar passed away in 1974, but her test still guides every delivery room on Earth. Every two seconds, somewhere in the world, a baby takes its first breath — and someone quietly calls out a number that honors the woman who refused to give up on newborns or on herself.

09/09/2025

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Westport
7825

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