Breast Crawling and Breastfeeding Success

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of TrialsClinicalTrials.gov
Year 2025
Breast crawling, also referred to as the newborn\'s self-attachment, was first observed in 1977 and described as the \"first important sucking behavior\". During the first hour after birth, the newborn exhibits instinctive movements aimed at locating and attaching to the breast. In 1987, Swedish researchers Widström et al., and later in 1990, Righard and Alade, detailed these behaviors through systematic observation. They found that when a newborn is placed prone on the mother\'s abdomen immediately after birth-while the mother is in a supine position-the baby begins to engage rooting and stepping reflexes. These reflexes typically lead the baby to begin crawling toward the breast around 29 minutes after birth, with effective suckling starting approximately 50 minutes postpartum.This instinctual behavior, observed in the first hour of life when the newborn is most alert and active, has been well documented in the literature as \"the breast crawl.\" It demonstrates the neonate\'s innate capacity to find and latch onto the mother\'s breast using biological reflexes when uninterrupted. Righard and Alade emphasized that routine hospital practices often interrupt this natural sequence, which may negatively impact the breastfeeding process. They underlined the importance of preserving the immediate postnatal hour, a critical window in which these behaviors are most likely to occur and support early breastfeeding success.
Epistemonikos ID: c01856b9523b9833d980585b072410aaeb0e8291
First added on: Sep 03, 2025