A Game Changer for Breastfeeding Support
How can technology impact breastfeeding? A persistent challenge in early breastfeeding is uncertainty around how much milk a baby actually receives. Until now, clinicians and parents have relied on indirect methods—like pre‑ and post‑feed weighing or diaper counts—which can be labor intensive.
Enter a groundbreaking solution developed by an interdisciplinary team at Northwestern University (in collaboration with Rice University): a soft, wearable electrode device that measures breast milk intake in real time using bioimpedance technology.
How It Works
- Tiny, safe electrical currents pass through the breast via electrodes placed on the skin.
- As milk is consumed, changes in breast tissue conductivity are detected.
- These bioimpedance shifts are wirelessly transmitted to a smartphone or tablet, offering clinicians and parents a live graphical display of milk intake.
Clinical and Emotional Benefits
- Reduces anxiety: Parents—especially those with premature infants or NICU experience—often face overwhelming uncertainty. This breastfeeding technology offers much-needed clarity and reassurance.
- Improves monitoring in clinical settings: NICU babies and those with feeding challenges can benefit from precision monitoring without disrupting skin-to-skin contact.
- Maintains the breastfeeding bond: Unlike bottle-feeding or weighed methods, the sensor supports hands-on feeding while preserving intimacy and milk stimulation.
Practical Use Cases
- NICU settings: Monitor feeding intake without disrupting the feeding process; supplement with galactagogues and track effectiveness in real time.
- At-home anxious mothers: Offer reassurance, validate supplement use, and reduce the urge to supplement with formula due to perceived low supply.
- Lactation education: Empower mothers with live visuals of how positions, latch, and supplements impact milk transfer.
Conclusion
This wearable device offers a quantum leap in lactation support—turning guesswork into measurable insight. For professionals focused on lactational pharmacology, weaving this tech with supplement strategies like Hale’s Medication and Mothers’ Milk can elevate patient care, maternal confidence, and breastfeeding success rates.
References:
1. Gold, J. (2025, July 22). Is baby getting enough breastmilk? New device helps moms learn. Los Angeles Times. https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-07-22/is-baby-getting-enough-breastmilk-new-device-helps-moms-learn
2. Morris, A. (2025, May 14). Got data? Breastfeeding device measures babies’ milk intake in real time. Northwestern Now. https://news.northwestern.edu/stories/2025/05/got-data-breastfeeding-device-measures-babies-milk-intake-in-real-time
Interested in other blog posts on breastfeeding? Explore these posts:
Fighting Misinformation on Weight Loss Drugs and the Affect on Breastfeeding Moms
Handling Medications for Depression While Supporting Breastfeeding
- Why Up-to-Date Medication Information Matters More than Ever in Lactation Care - March 26, 2026
- Breastfeeding and HIV: What Lactation Consultants Need to Know - January 21, 2026
- Supporting Breastfeeding While Managing Chronic Conditions - December 17, 2025



