Hi Virginia,
I wouldn't equate "infant feeding" with "breastfeeding" but I would like to see a lot more research on "infant feeding" rather than just breastfeeding. Frankly we know bugger all about how women use formula (or other breastmilk replacements).
Karleen Gribble
Australia
From: Virginia Thorley
Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2009 9:22 AM
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Subject: Terminology (infant feeding, feeding, teat, artificial nipple, mouthpiece)
Hi,
While I can see merit in Karleen's suggestion of equating the term "infant feeding" with breastfeeding, we do need a generic term that covers anything at all that is fed to an infant. That is, whether the baby is breastfed (directly from the mother or another woman), bottle-fed breast milk, artificially fed, or given complementary food after 6 months. I agree we need to use a term that differentiates types of feeding that aren't natural, whether we are talking about commercially packaged artificial baby milks or traditional artificial feeding (diluted or undiluted animal milks, cereal-based preparations, arrowroot-based foods). I thought of "sub-optimal infant feeding", but I don't think that would take off. The book distributed to all new mothers in the post-World War II period in Queensland, Mother & Child, titled its chapter about substitutes, "Artificial or Unnatural Feeding". (Curiously, this was at a time when mother-books by a leading manufacturer of artificial feeding products were distributed to new mothers, too.)
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