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Date: | Tue, 25 Aug 2009 10:49:35 +1000 |
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Numerous people have posted about mothers in their areas who are hung up on
the idea that there are two distinct milks and who negate the value of
lactose in milk. It looks to me as if it is time to go back to Lactose 101
(if there were such a course!). It is time to look at what the lactose in
human milk actually does - and it is a much more important role than the fad
described in numerous posts suggests. I, too, have had mothers talk of "the
good milk" vs the other kind - but not recently.
It would be timely to look back through the textbooks to remind ourselves of
the importance of lactose to the human infant (other than the exceptions
with primary or induced intolerance). I worry about the long-term effects
for babies reared on lactose-free artificial baby milks, babies who have
received these products largely because of advertising and popular
perception. (I am not talking about babies with a special need.) Should we
term these products "lactose-deficient", rather than "lactose-free"? Food
for thought?
Perceptions get skewed and the baby's individual needs are not met, when
numbers start coming into the natural process, with full-term, healthy
babies - whether the numbers are the number of minutes, the percentage of
cream, the most bags of pumped milk women can store in their freezers.
While I was writing this, a mother rang me about fluid balance, and told me
she was weighing her baby's nappies (diapers) in the night to check output.
A bit of reassurance was needed.
Virginia
in Brisbane, Queensland, where summer has arrived in August - very early.
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