The VerdictLOW CONVICTION

Nursing neck isn't damage. It's posture.

At your next feed, lean back and bring the baby up to your chest instead of curling down over the baby. Prop pillows under your arms so you're not holding the weight with your neck and shoulders.

  1. Here's what's really happening: the ache comes from holding a forward-folded feeding position for long stretches many times a day, not from any injury to your spine.
  2. The one thing that makes it worse: curling your neck and shoulders down over the baby, and carrying the baby on the same side every time.
  3. The one change that matters: bring the baby up to you instead of folding down over the baby, and prop yourself up with pillows.

Hold your phone out at arm's length. For ten seconds it's nothing. Hold it for thirty minutes, eight times a day, and your arm screams. Your neck muscles do the same when you curl over the baby to feed. They aren't injured, they're exhausted from holding a position they were never built to hold that long.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Cervical Spine · Upper Back · Periscapular

The "Nursing Neck"

Breastfeeding-related upper back and neck pain: a common, fixable ache from how you sit to feed, not a sign of damage and not a reason to stop breastfeeding.

Conviction: Low

What Works

There is no breastfeeding-specific treatment trial. The framework below is borrowed from the much larger body of research on ordinary neck pain, where it works well. The direction is trustworthy; the exact dose is your call.

Cinematic anatomy of the neck and shoulder musculature

Fix the position and reassure STRONGEST LEVER

Laid-back or reclined feeding. Bring the baby to the breast, not your neck to the baby. Support with pillows and a footrest, keep your head stacked over your shoulders, vary positions, and manage how you carry and lift. Pair it with the reassurance that this is benign and you do not need to stop breastfeeding. This is the only lever with breastfeeding-specific supporting data, and it is the lowest-risk, highest-payoff change you can make.

Exercise Prescription

ExerciseHowDosePain guide
Chin tucksSit tall, glide your chin straight back into a "double chin", hold a few seconds2-3 × 8-10, dailyMild effort, no sharp pain
Shoulder-blade squeezesDraw your shoulder blades back and down, hold, relax2-3 × 10, dailyEases tension
Upper-trap / side-neck stretchTilt your head away and slightly down until you feel a gentle stretch2-3 × 20-30s each side, dailyComfortable stretch only
Open-book rotationLie on your side, knees bent, slowly open your top arm toward the floor behind you2 × 8 each side, most daysGentle, no pinching
More options (moderate evidence)

Neck + scapular strengthening MODERATE reduces ordinary neck pain. General exercise is not inferior to targeted drills, so the exercise you'll actually do beats the "perfect" one you won't.

Telerehabilitation MODERATE remote-delivered programs work for neck pain. Ideal when you're housebound with a newborn.

Hands-on therapy MODERATE (short-term) mobilization and soft-tissue work give short-term relief and help you get moving, but they are an add-on, not the cure.

Mind-body / relaxation EMERGING useful when stress and poor sleep are amplifying the pain.

What Doesn't Work

  • Passive treatments alone (heat, ultrasound, e-stim as the whole plan). They lose to active care.
  • Stopping breastfeeding to fix the pain. The problem is posture and load, not lactation.
  • Routine scans. No value without red flags, and they tend to over-medicalize a posture problem.

Red Flags — See a Doctor

Most nursing neck pain is harmless. These signs are not. If any apply, get checked before treating it as a posture problem.

  • Arm weakness, numbness, tingling, or pain shooting down the arm (possible nerve involvement)
  • New, severe, or constant spine pain, pain at several levels, or a sense you have "lost height" (the bone-fragility warning in new and breastfeeding moms)
  • Night pain with fever, or morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes (possible inflammatory or infective cause)
  • Fever, or a red, hot, painful breast, or feeling generally unwell (possible mastitis/infection)
  • Persistent low mood or feeling overwhelmed that is affecting caring for your baby
Cinematic anatomy of the cervical and thoracic spine

Refer to: your GP for a bone-health and mood check and safe pain-relief advice; A&E for sudden arm weakness or numbness. Scans are only needed when a red flag is present, never by default.

At your next feed, lean back and bring the baby up to your chest instead of curling down over the baby. Prop pillows under your arms so your neck isn't holding the weight.

It removes the strain at its source. The pain comes from the position, so changing the position is the fastest relief there is.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

Return to Normal Activity

You're back on track when you can tick all of these.

Conviction: LOW

Low overall, because no trial has tested treatment for this exact problem. But the parts that matter are solid: it is highly likely that posture and load are the driver and that the condition is benign and fixable, and it is highly important to screen for the red flags above before calling it simple posture pain.

What would change this?

A proper trial in breastfeeding women comparing position correction alone, position correction plus a home neck-and-shoulder exercise program, and usual care, measuring pain and disability and whether moms keep breastfeeding. A strong exercise arm would lift our confidence in the program from moderate to high.

Why "it's just posture" is a confident claim despite low overall conviction

A study following 10,603 women for 18 months found breastfeeding was not a driver of lasting pelvic-girdle pain. The pain tracks the exposure and settles as posture and conditioning normalize, which is why we're confident it's mechanical and reversible, not damage.

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

This is a load-versus-capacity problem, not a damaged structure. A nursing mom typically curls down over the baby in a forward-head, rounded-shoulder, side-bent position and holds it for 20 to 45 minutes, 8 to 12 or more times a day, for months.

That puts a sustained, low-level load on the muscles at the back and side of the neck and between the shoulder blades. Held long enough and often enough, they fatigue, lose blood flow under constant tension, and start to ache. Add the growing weight of an infant you carry and lift all day, plus postpartum deconditioning and broken sleep that lower your tissue tolerance, and a posture that used to be fine becomes painful. Because nothing is injured, the fix is reducing the load (posture) and rebuilding capacity (exercise).

Cinematic anatomy of cervical and periscapular muscles under load

How to Identify It

There is no special test for breastfeeding neck pain because, by definition, it is ordinary mechanical pain. Assessment is mostly about ruling out the other causes and finding the muscle that needs training.

  • Aching neck, upper-back, or between-the-shoulder-blades pain that builds during and after feeds pattern, not a test
  • Forward-head, rounded-shoulder posture, most obvious when you recreate the feeding position
  • Spurling's test to screen for a pinched nerve use to rule out arm symptoms
  • Deep neck-flexor endurance (a chin-tuck hold) to find the trainable weakness impairment measure
Cinematic anatomy of the cervical spine and deep neck flexors

The Debate

What people assume vs what the evidence shows

Assumed: Breastfeeding damages your back and neck for the long term.

Evidence: A cohort of 10,603 women found breastfeeding was not a driver of persistent pelvic-girdle pain at 18 months (2015). Don't catastrophize it.

Assumed: You need specific, targeted neck drills.

Evidence: General exercise is not inferior to specific exercise for neck pain (2024). The active ingredient is load, dose, and adherence, not the perfect drill.

Assumed: Hands-on treatment fixes it.

Evidence: Manual therapy gives short-term relief and adds to exercise, but it is not a standalone cure (2019, 2023).

Assumed: You need to go in to a clinic.

Evidence: Telerehabilitation works for neck pain (2025). A housebound mom can be treated at home.

Honest Limitations

No condition-specific trials

Every treatment claim is borrowed from neck-pain studies in people who were not postpartum, not sleep-deprived, and not under a fixed daily feeding load. The direction of effect is trustworthy. The exact dose and size of benefit are not.

The mechanism evidence is observational

Studies show poor feeding posture co-occurs with pain. They cannot prove that correcting it cures the pain, only that the two go together. The logic is sound and low-risk to act on, but it is logic, not a trial.

Adherence is the real ceiling

The biggest failure mode is prescribing a program a sleep-deprived mom can't keep up. The cheapest win, re-positioning the feed, needs zero adherence. The exercise part lives or dies on keeping it small and realistic.

Sources

  1. The influence of breastfeeding factors on the prevalence of back and neck pain (online survey), 2024. The preflight "Mekonnen" landmark linking feeding posture/positioning to neck and back pain. [PMID 39210354]
  2. Association of breastfeeding positioning with musculoskeletal pain in postpartum mothers (Rwanda), 2019. Non-ergonomic positioning associated with MSK pain. [PMID 31000863]
  3. Breastfeeding and pelvic girdle pain: a follow-up study of 10,603 women 18 months after delivery, 2015. Breastfeeding was not a driver of persistent pain. The anti-over-pathologizing anchor. [PMID 25327939]
  4. Breastfeeding-related musculoskeletal pain among lactating mothers, 2026. Cross-sectional multi-country survey. [PMID 41593644]
  5. Effectiveness of specific neck exercise for nonspecific neck pain (SR/MA), 2022. [PMID 34935963]
  6. Effectiveness and optimal dosage of resistance training for chronic nonspecific neck pain (MA), 2019. [PMID 30782926]
  7. General exercises are not superior to specific exercises for nonspecific neck pain (MA), 2024. [PMID 39593550]
  8. The combined effects of manual therapy and exercise on neck pain and disability (MA), 2023. [PMID 37092822]
  9. Telerehabilitation for neck pain (MA), 2025. [PMID 40792483]
  10. Blanpied PR, et al. Neck Pain: Revision 2017. JOSPT Clinical Practice Guidelines. The borrowed rehabilitation framework.

This is educational self-management guidance, not personalized medical treatment. Breastfeeding-related neck and upper-back pain is common and usually benign, but the red flags above always come first. If anything here matches your warning signs, see a clinician before starting an exercise program.

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