Going back to work while breastfeeding is one of the most anxiety-inducing transitions a new mother faces. Will there be enough milk? Will the baby refuse the bottle? Will the nanny cope?
At a recent Kenya Association for Breastfeeding (KAB) forum, three of the country’s leading voices in maternal and infant health — Wangeci Kihara, Ciru Ciera, and Dr. Irene Nzioki — sat down to answer exactly those questions. What emerged wasn’t just advice. It was permission: permission to stop comparing, stop feeling guilty, and start building systems that work.
Here’s what they had to say.
1. Stop Comparing Milk. Start Trusting Your Body.
Wangeci Kihara opened with a myth she says causes more anxiety than almost anything else: the idea that there’s a universal “enough.”
There isn’t. If your baby is gaining weight, your supply is enough — for your baby. Whether you pump 70ml or 300ml is irrelevant if your child is thriving. Comparing output to other mothers, Wangeci says, does nothing but manufacture stress.
And stress is the real enemy. She put it simply: the body is biologically built to feed. The bigger obstacle is mental — mothers need to “feed their mind” with belief, because a mother’s mental state has a direct line to her milk supply.
Her advice? Choose your circle carefully. Surround yourself with mothers who’ve successfully breastfed while working. Who you spend time with shapes what you believe is possible.
2. Know Your Rights — Kenyan Law Is On Your Side
Ciru Ciera brought the legal receipts. Under Kenya’s Health Act of 2017, working mothers are entitled to protections many still don’t know exist:
- One hour of protected time daily for expressing or breastfeeding — separate from your lunch break
- Flexible use of that hour: take it all at once, or split it into three 20-minute sessions
- A private lactation room with running water and an electrical socket — a bathroom does not qualify
This matters nationally, not just personally. Kenya’s exclusive breastfeeding rate slipped from 61% in 2014 to 60% in 2022. Ciera’s message: using your legal rights isn’t a favor to yourself — it’s part of reversing that trend.
She also introduced a framework worth remembering — the Three Bs:
- Baby — needs a good latch (covering at least an inch of the areola) to trigger oxytocin release
- Brain — a mother’s mental state directly affects milk-producing hormones
- Breast — breasts are “factories, not warehouses.” They produce on demand. Skip removals, and the body reads that as a signal to slow down — because, as Ciera puts it, “nature abhors waste.”
Her practical tip for anyone without steady storage access, including market vendors and informal workers: hand expression is a lifesaver when there’s no electricity, and expressing straight into a clean cup works when there’s no pump.
3. Your Baby Is More Adaptable Than You Think
Dr. Irene Nzioki spoke for the one person in the room who couldn’t speak for themselves: the baby.
Her core message to guilt-ridden mothers — babies adapt brilliantly. In her clinical experience, she has never seen a baby who couldn’t adjust to a mother’s return to work. Framing work as providing for a child’s future, rather than abandoning the present, was central to her talk.
She gave mothers a simple checklist to know if their baby is thriving in daycare or with a nanny:
- Does the baby light up, smile, or laugh when you return?
- Are diapers consistently full?
- Is the baby gaining weight and height steadily at clinic visits?
She also flagged something many caregivers get wrong: force-feeding. Holding a baby flat with the bottle at 90 degrees isn’t safe. Instead, she recommends paced feeding — baby upright, bottle horizontal, feed lasting 15–20 minutes — so the baby controls the pace and doesn’t overfeed. Overfeeding, she noted, is a leading cause of colic and disrupted sleep, which affects everyone’s next workday.
For expressed milk storage, her guidelines are simple to remember: 4–6 hours at room temperature, 4 days refrigerated, 6–12 months frozen.
And for mothers living with HIV: exclusive breastfeeding for six months, continuing up to two years, is recommended — provided the mother strictly adheres to ART and the baby remains on prophylaxis.
4. The Logistics That Actually Make It Work
Beyond the science, the panel shared the unglamorous, practical details that make or break a mother’s first weeks back:
- Rehearse before you return. Around 6–8 weeks in, let the nanny run a full day solo while you stay hands-off. You’ll spot training gaps and learn your baby’s real daily milk needs before it counts.
- Pick your return day wisely. Wangeci recommends starting back on a Wednesday or Thursday — a short first week gives you room to troubleshoot before the weekend.
- You don’t need a freezer stash. Pumping “today for tomorrow” is enough. Chasing a massive frozen supply just adds pressure nobody needs.
- Bottle refusal is normal. One mother tried 12 bottles before her baby accepted the 13th. If bottles remain a struggle, cup or spoon feeding are effective, government-recommended alternatives.
- Fit matters. A wrong pump flange size — one mother was using 28mm when she needed 21mm — causes pain and low output. Get measured professionally before assuming your supply is the problem.
- Frequency beats duration. Even 10 minutes of milk removal, done consistently, works better than occasional long sessions.
The Bigger Picture
Perhaps the most powerful reframe of the day came from Ciru Ciera, who reminded the room that this isn’t only a corporate mother’s issue. The same anxiety, the same biology, and the same need for support apply to “mama fuas”(laundry workers) and “mama mbogas” (market vendors) — women navigating breastfeeding with none of the infrastructure a formal workplace might offer.
That’s the thread running through all three talks: breastfeeding while working isn’t a personal failing to manage alone. It’s a systems problem — one that needs informed mothers, trained caregivers, compliant employers, and a supportive community. It’s exactly the work KAB exists to do.
Are you a mother preparing to return to work, or an employer looking to support breastfeeding staff? Reach out to the Kenya Association for Breastfeeding — we’re here to help you build a plan that works.

