Diana West and I are looking for a reference to include in our new book
about low milk supply that speaks to the issue of mothers' estimates of
their babies' intakes during the traditional, fussy period of the day when
mothers feel their milk supplies are lowest.
Several years ago, I attended an ILCA conference in DC-- I was pretty sure
that Jane Heinig was the speaker- that discussed a study from UC Davis that
explored this issue and found that mothers consistently underestimated how
much their babies were actually getting because of the lack of fullness and
the lack of continuous flow of milk. However, we cannot find this study
despite an extensive PubMed search. Does anyone know about it or another
study that explores this issue?
Thanks,
Lisa and Diana
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