Dear Nina and others:
There is a huge body of research in nutritional anthropometry demonstrating the accuracy
of these scales. The researchers are actually using the wrong standard. Long ago,
nutritionists showed the inaccuracy of measuring by EYEBALL what is in the bottle. Dr.
Wight has already written that one of these studies were flawed. I will be happy to
demonstrate at the next ILCA conference how poor eyeballing the content of the bottle is.
There is water tension, the meniscus that can be misread, the breastmilk that clings to
the bottle and doesn't come out. All of these things have been researched before and
need not be researched again.
Nutritionists have done a huge body of research on estimating intake. The bottom line is
that there is NO gold standard. You can do 24 hour food records. What happens - people
change what they eat. You can do 24 hour weighing the food and plate waste. Again,
people change what they eat. You can do 24 hour recalls, people forget what they ate.
You can also do food frequency recalls. None of these are the truth. Each of these has a
role when you understand what information they do provide, what their flaws are, and
how to use the information in conjunction with others.
No one except researchers does 24 hour test weighings. Again, no one who uses test
weighing uses it in isolation. Anyone who is guessing by swallows falls prey to the same
problems of dependability. If you observe swallows at one feeding it does not mean that
all feedings are the same as the one that you observed. Also, I guarantee you that none
of the mothers I see are stressed out by my use of the scale. They are usually quite
relieved. ANY measure that you use whether clinical, diaper counts, behavior, weights is
subject to dependability problems if you don't do follow up.
It is not the tool that is the problem, it is the use of the tool. Any tool, even observations
of swallows can be misused. I cannot tell you how many babies have been sent out of
the hospital when their mothers were told that they were swallowing, only to have that
not be the case. Or vice versa.
One of my Australian colleagues here explained to me how her baby was test weighed for
every feeding when she gave birth in Australia. That to me would stress a mother out
entirely. That is NOT how most people use scale. I use it like any tool I use in the
kitchen. Measuring cups, teaspoons, etc. Taste always wins out in the end over precise
measurements. Judiciously and appropriately and in context.
Best regards, Susan E. Burger, MHS, PhD, IBCLC
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