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Mon, 18 Jul 2005 09:01:04 EDT |
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Kathy and others, what I was suggesting is to look at the big picture or the
total picture of the baby and not just focus on weights.
Checking weights have a place but I have found that they are now the main
focus of parents and caretakers.
Here are a couple reasons placing weights as very important can cause
problems: scales can be wrong, scales can vary, people doing the weighing can make
errors, timing of weights, just to list a few. People have been around a
whole lot longer than scales.
I am very troubled by some other posts that feel parents would not be able
to notice that their baby is thriving. Yes, this can happen but hopefully
this is the exception and not the rule.
I was not suggesting that babies should not be followed up with
appointments. I would hope and expect that health care providers should be able to
determine if a baby is thriving and appears healthy without using a scale to note
this.
What parents should be comfortable with is to note that their baby is alert,
happy, satisfied, good outputs, and growing, all without the assistance of a
scale.
Where is Dr. Jack through all of this?
I am not criticizing what folks write here but feel we all can try and help
parents and providers to get back at looking at the baby.
Ann Perry, RN IBCLC
Boston, MA
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