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Lactation Information and Discussion <[log in to unmask]>
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Fri, 1 Oct 1999 17:21:02 EDT
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In a message dated 10/1/1999 7:43:54 AM Central Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:

<< From today's Op-Ed section of the New York Times on the Web:

 October 1, 1999

 Beware the Parenting Police

 By PENELOPE LEACH

 LONDON -- In the Western world, anxious parents love to follow scientific
 studies that tell them what to do with their babies.

 The Federal Consumer Product Safety Commission played into this obsession
 on Wednesday when it issued a stern warning: parents who sleep with their
 babies and toddlers are at risk of accidentally smothering or strangling
 them.

 Before making such a stark declaration of cause and effect, a government
 agency should make its case very carefully. In this particular instance,
 one would expect the commission to establish beyond a doubt that some
 babies died solely because they were sleeping in their parents' beds.
 But it did nothing of the kind, and its dire warning could end up hurting,
 rather than helping, parents and their babies.

 First, as its authors admit, the study did not adequately account for other
 risk factors. It found that from 1990 to 1997, 515 children under the age
 of 2 died as a result of sleeping in their parents' beds. How did the study
 determine this? It looked at the death certificates of infants, coroners'
 reports and news accounts.

 But death certificates often don't mention other risk factors. Did the
 parents drink? Did they smoke or take drugs? Above all, were the babies
 lying on their stomachs? All these elements have been shown to play roles
 in sudden infant death syndrome.

 Three other studies, in the United States, New Zealand and Britain,
 reported no direct risk to babies from sleeping in parents' beds. The
 studies, published in medical journals in 1996, 1997 and 1999, blamed other
 factors for deaths. The New Zealand research found that sudden infant death
 syndrome could be reduced by 35 percent if babies slept on their backs
 instead of their stomachs. This is now accepted advice everywhere.

 Even without definitive scientific proof, is there any harm in warning
 parents that it may be dangerous to sleep with their babies? Well, yes. We
 are talking about something that is very important in the lives of many
 parents. Being close at night helps parents bond with their babies, and for
 mothers who aren't at home during the day, bed-sharing is a vital aid to
 breast-feeding.

 What happens if mothers are convinced that their duty is to keep the baby
 in the crib? How many will get up night after night when a baby cries,
 nurse the baby, rock the baby to sleep, put the baby back in the crib, then
 go to bed? When a mother nurses an infant in her bed, both get more sleep.

 The new study seems to play to the vulnerability of Western parents, who,
 lacking traditional supports like extended families, village elders and
 traditions, rely on experts.

 For instance, an obstetrician says, "For the sake of the baby, you must
 have a C-section." Any woman has to say yes. No wonder more than a fifth of
 all births in the United States are by Caesarean.

 I'm not knocking experts, but I do think we should avoid offering advice
 until we're absolutely sure that it accounts for every variable. How many
 times has one study come out, only to be contradicted by another?

 And sometimes experts should trust the parents. As long as the parents
 don't drink, smoke, sleep with thick comforters or put babies on their
 stomachs, there is no real evidence against sleeping with a baby, as most
 people in the world do.

 Penelope Leach, a psychologist at the University of London, is the author
 of "Your Baby and Child: From Birth to Age Five."

  >>

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