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Date: | Mon, 16 Jul 2007 10:55:21 +0100 |
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>It's a bit of a stretch to assume that the exact same thing is happening in
>a newborn, but who of us hasn't seen the baby who appears content to starve?
Absolutely....and here, the general way of explaining it to mothers
(and I have no idea if it is researched or not, or how you would
research it) is that it is a combination of placid baby and a
physiologically-induced method of conserving energy which the baby
takes on, and so doesn't cry to be fed.
>And, when they are actively fed for some time so that they catch up to where
>they should be, they suddenly start to take the initiative themselves like
>any other baby.
True.
In the mothers I am in touch with it seems to me it's more common in
second and third babies - these are the babies born into a busy
household with a mother who has bf before, and who is more than happy
to wait for the baby to 'ask' to be fed and who easily prioritises
the other children. I have heard them called 'happy starvers' though
I don't think it is good to use this term, despite its accuracy. I
do suspect it has something to do with personality, at least at
first. There is often a history of pacifier use - mother discovers
she can keep the baby going without a feed for longer if she plugs
the baby, while she takes the older kids to school or does something
else. Baby seems quite happy being plugged : (
I have seen it in singletons, too.
When these babies are given more food, they do indeed recover.
Heather Welford Neil
NCT bfc, tutor, UK
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