Most mastitis cases begin as blocked ducts.
A blocked duct is milk trapped under pressure, creating pain, swelling, and sometimes fever. Left unresolved, inflammation escalates. But when addressed early, blocked ducts are highly reversible.
Effective Strategies to Restore Flow
• Feed more frequently on the affected side
• Change feeding positions to target different ductal areas
(For example: baby’s legs under your arm, hand behind the head, supporting—not compressing—the breast)
• Check for external pressure from bras, seat belts, baby carriers, or sleep positions
One of the most damaging myths I encounter is the advice to stop feeding from the affected breast. In most non-infectious cases, this worsens the problem.
Breastfeeding is often the treatment.

Common, Overlooked Causes
1. Pressing the breast away from the baby’s nose during feeding
2. Unsupported breast tissue sagging during feeds
3. Rough handling from an older child or overly enthusiastic baby
Pro tip
Feeding while lying down—mother and baby parallel—can help drain the upper breast quadrants where blockages commonly hide. Adequate hydration further supports milk flow and tissue elasticity.A Closing Truth
Breastfeeding is not fragile.
Women’s bodies are not incompetent.
Mastitis is not a verdict.
With accurate physiology, proper positioning, stress reduction, and targeted anti-inflammatory support, most mothers can continue breastfeeding confidently—without fear, interruption, or unnecessary medication.
This is not about rejecting medicine.
It is about using it wisely, and honoring the intelligence of the body first.