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Alison Ross, Midwife
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Registered Midwife, DipHe, BSc (Hons) Was a midwife at Kingston Hospital and Specialist Midwife in Perinatal Mental Health.
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Antenatal care

Fetal growth

The human body has evolved over hundreds of thousands of years to grow babies safely inside. Oxygen and nutrients pass into your baby from your placenta, which lines your uterus, via the umbilical cord.
In Short
If babies are born very prematurely, they may need medical help to feed and breathe. What mothers' bodies do so effortlessly, an incubator replicates by providing warmth, oxygen, and food.

'Kangaroo care' - lots of skin to skin contact of baby and Mum - was trialed in Colombia when they had an incubator shortage - and was found to be an excellent method of regulating premature babies' body temperatures and breathing and helping form a strong bond between mother and baby.

How does my body feed and grow my baby?

When you conceive, the fertilised egg travels down one of your fallopian tube and into the uterus. There it lands on the surface of the uterus, which has a rich blood supply and burrows into the lining of your uterus. This embryo quickly needs oxygen and energy to make the miraculous change from a few cells to a fully developed baby.

A structure called a placenta develops in the lining of your womb it grafts itself onto the lining of the uterus with a blood supply that allows oxygen and energy to pass from your blood supply to your baby’s blood supply. The placenta also passes antibodies and immunity from Mum to baby particularly in the last three months of pregnancy.

Oxygen and energy (fats, carbohydrates, proteins) travel from the placenta into the baby.

The umbilical cord carries nutrient-rich oxygenated blood into your baby and is attached to your baby’s belly button. Your baby’s lungs cannot work until they are born and take their first breath. Until birth, all oxygen comes via the baby’s umbilical cord.

All the waste products coming out from your baby come back out through the umbilical cord, through the placenta, then back into your bloodstream as well, for your body to dispose of. This means your baby doesn’t poo until after they are born (sometimes if they are experiencing stress they may poo meconium into the amniotic fluid).

Like other mammals, a woman’s body has evolved over millions of years to safely grow their baby inside their body and provide them with all the oxygen and nutrients over the 40 weeks until they are fully developed, able to breathe and feed.

Premature babies and kangaroo care

If a baby is born very prematurely, they may need medical help to feed them and sometimes to help them breathe (if their lungs haven’t been fully developed). What mothers’ bodies do so effortlessly, an incubator tries to copy by providing warmth, oxygen, and food until the baby is able to breastfeed, breathe and regulate their own body temperature.

If your baby is born prematurely, your body will also be very good at regulating your baby’s temperature and breathing with lots of skin to skin contact. In fact, this form of kangaroo care was trialed in Colombia when they had an incubator shortage and has been found to be better at regulating babies’ body temperatures and breathing. So mums bodies are great at supporting babies even after a premature birth. Lactating will also begin earlier so that when your baby is able to suck they will be able to breastfeed. The colostrum you produce will be the perfect food for your premature baby and can be given by tiny syringe until they can latch on and breastfeed themselves. You can be supported to express your breastmilk with an electric breast pump so your supply is stimulated and developed, ready for when baby is going to breastfeed.

Last reviewed on: 17/11/2023
Next review on: 17/11/2024
DISCLAIMER
This article is for information only and should not be used for the diagnosis or treatment of medical conditions. Essential Parent has used all reasonable care in compiling the information from leading experts and institutions but makes no warranty as to its accuracy. Consult a doctor or other health care professional for diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions. For details click here.