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Date: | Wed, 15 Nov 2006 09:20:07 +0000 |
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>Dear Nina and others:
>
>There is a huge body of research in nutritional anthropometry
>demonstrating the accuracy
>of these scales. The researchers are actually using the wrong
>standard. Long ago,
>nutritionists showed the inaccuracy of measuring by EYEBALL what is
>in the bottle. Dr.
>Wight has already written that one of these studies were flawed. I
>will be happy to
>demonstrate at the next ILCA conference how poor eyeballing the
>content of the bottle is.
>There is water tension, the meniscus that can be misread, the
>breastmilk that clings to
>the bottle and doesn't come out. All of these things have been
>researched before and
>need not be researched again.
But this study (the one in ADC) did *not* eyeball the bottle. The
milk that was going into the babies was weighed, and it was also
measured by syringe.
>
>
>It is not the tool that is the problem, it is the use of the tool.
>Any tool, even observations
>of swallows can be misused. I cannot tell you how many babies have
>been sent out of
>the hospital when their mothers were told that they were swallowing,
>only to have that
>not be the case. Or vice versa.
But that's just poor practice - test weighing is not going to resolve that.
I am going to post later with a resume of what I have learnt from
raising the issue of test weighing - thanks to all who responded.
Heather Welford Neil
NCT bfc, tutor, UK
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