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Date: | Wed, 10 Dec 2003 15:37:37 EST |
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Lara wrote:
<< In other words, 5% of the population had genuine low milk supply that
wouldn't necessarily be prevented with good postpartum support and
information? That's "very common" in my language, not "extremely
rare". There is no way the medical profession would accept organ
failure statistics like that in a young healthy population where any
other organ of the body is concerned. Why is it just accepted that 5%
of women will suffer lactation failure?
</rhetorical question mode> >>
Interesting point, but are other organs so deliberately and obviously removed
from their physical functions? I wonder if it makes a difference that women's
breast functions are not supported ( so to speak...:). Are the numbers
similar in places where breastfeeding rates and durations are higher? ( Where was
the Drs study data from?)
Judy LeVan Fram, Brooklyn, USA, who can't help responding to rhetoricals
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