What you'll need
to pump at work In order to
provide breastmilk for your baby while you are at work, you
really don't need much. The bare essentials are as follows:
1. A private room - preferable with
good lighting, electricity, and a comfortable chair. This can be
your office, a conference room, or even a large supply closet.
The bathroom is not an acceptable place to pump.
2. Flexible break time to use for
pumping. You should be allowed to alter your schedule to
accommodate your three pumping breaks, each to be about 20
minutes (though for some women pumping takes a little more or
less time). These breaks can be a part of your regular paid day,
unpaid time, or time that you can make up by staying late or
coming in early.
3. A supportive company policy. Your
company should have something in writing that states that it is
supportive of breastfeeding mothers. A sample policy is provided
here. If your company is not willing to put a policy in
writing, be sure that you have a clear agreement with your
direct supervisor.
Stepping it
up
Your company can make working and
breastfeeding easier for its employees in many ways. Here are a
few examples of suggested enhancements to your lactation policy:
1. A specified pumping room - this room
should contain electrical outlets, comfortable chairs, desks or
tables to set the pump on, good lighting and possibly computers
and a telephone. It can have a refrigerator specifically for
milk storage, a sink for washing up, and reading materials that
support breastfeeding.
2. Paid breaks - your company can
provide three paid breaks during the day in which to express
your milk.
3. On-site daycare - Daycare located
close-by eliminates the need for pumping, as you can be called
to come feed your baby whenever they are hungry. On-site daycare
can make the return to work easier for both mothers and babies.
4. Flexible maternity leave - Allowing
a mother to return to work part-time, working part-time from
home, or a compressed work-week can make breastfeeding easier
for her. Some companies encourage job-sharing for new mothers or
allow telecommuting for a few months after a mother returns to
work.
5. Paid maternity leave - a paid
maternity leave allows a mother to stay home longer without
financial stress. Paid maternity leave is a family-friendly
policy, encouraging mother-baby bonding and increasing the
duration of breastfeeding.
6. Lactation Support - some companies
employ corporate lactation specialists or private Lactation
Consultants to help their new mothers with breastfeeding
concerns. By helping to get breastfeeding off to the best start,
employers are protecting the health of their employees families,
in addition to reducing the amount of time the parents will miss
from work once they return.
7. Breastpumps. Some companies provide
multi-user breastpumps in a specified pumping room. This saves
the employee the expense of a pump, and these multi-user pumps
are typically of the highest quality. Some companies select
health insurance packages that cover the cost of a breast pump
for every new mother, sometimes at no additional cost to the
company.
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