Pat said:
>>heel stick is not quite as accurate as venous.
We didn't used to feed babies ANYTHING for 18-24 hours, that's why all the
brain impaired people are making up the rules now :-b Sorry I'm so
cranky<<
Ahhhh -- but Bill Gates wasn't fed for the first 24 hours of his life and
he's made a gazillion $$. The problem is, now that we have glucometers,
and it is so EASY to do a heel stick, we make it the golden rule. We now
have to have a disease to use these nifty gadgets. Sorta like bililights.
And Glucophage and Lipitor. As soon as they invent something that is
relatively inexpensive, we have new parameters for use -- not necessarily wrong,
mind you, but there it is.
I worry about the glucometer readings and treating babies based on those,
particularly if it means giving formula. For anyone that has ever taken
their blood sugar using one of those, you can do a finger stick, see what
your sugar is, wipe your finger off, squeeze out another drop of blood in less
than 30 seconds, re do it, and the levels can be as much as 10 points
different.
Why are we putting our faith in these gadgets which might be inaccurate?
Perhaps if you get a glucoscan below 50, wait a minute, squeeze the heel
again, and try again. Maybe you could go for the best of three?
Jan Barger, who is also one of the non-fed infants.
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