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On 09/12/2006, at 19:48, Renee Drake wrote:
> In a message dated 12/8/2006 7:22:23 A.M. Pacific Standard Time,
> [log in to unmask] writes:
>
>> Given the active bactericidal qualities of
>> fresh milk, I felt comfortable that a small inoculum of my son's own
>> mouth bacteria would not cause the milk to rapidly become harmful
>
> *************************************
>
> The issue isn't necessarily the bacteria growth in the left over
> milk. The
> saliva is the first (and actually a very powerful) step in
> digestion. Saliva
> begins to digest starches and carbohydrates and sugars and does so
> quite
> quickly.
I don't believe that human milk contains starches.
> I haven't been able to look into any evidence-based examples,
> however it is
> my BELIEF that within a very short amount of time, the leftover
> milk would
> have started to be digested by the time it was refed. (the idea
> of that is
> sooo GROSS to me). This is the same reason we no longer advise
> moms to feed
> baby directly from the baby food jar and then save what hasn't
> been used.
Experience has shown that drawing analogies between dead infant foods
and live human milk, and making assumptions based on these false
analogies, is not an approach likely to lead to accurate conclusions.
I also try not to base infant feeding advice on subjective
"grossness" - this seems to me a slippery slope, and also one on
which many anti-breastfeeding practices are based.
You have offered your sensory experience that cornstarch-filler-
laden, culture-medium commercial baby foods appear different after
exposure to saliva over time. I'm happy to offer my sensory
experience of breastmilk saved for several hours after a bottle-feed:
no change. No change in appearance, smell, or taste. I hope that one
day there might also be biochemical analyses of such milk - if anyone
has seen any, it would be great if they could be shared.
I've not seen any evidence suggesting that re-offering fresh milk
for a short period is harmful. The alternative (for most women not
blessed with an oversupply or plentiful donor milk) is usually
artificial baby milk, a substance known to carry significant risks. I
believe that if health practitioners are going to advise a practice
likely to lead to an increase in artificial feeding, we need an
_extremely_ solid evidence base; and there is no evidence at all to
suggest that re-offering milk for several hours is harmful.
Lara Hopkins
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