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Date: | Sat, 17 Feb 2007 09:56:51 EST |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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Winnie, I have been following the Dr. Karp's book thread. I do not see any
post that shows an inability to disagree respectfully. Disagreement is
possible. Those of us who disagree with Dr. Karp have not been rude or
disrespectful. Just the fact that we do not agree with him does not show a lack of
respect for him. We may even agree with part of his theories (even though they
are not really his) we just a disagree with part of the direction he took the
concept. I do not consider what he creates to be a reflex. He can promote
it as such and he can have many experts agree with him. I still have the
right to disagree and say so. To do so on Lactnet requires I do not personally
attack him or show disrespect for him as a person. It does not require I tip
toe around my disagreement. You are right too...we have been there done that
and for anyone who wants to know what was said back when, just go to the
archives and read.
I have great respect for lactation professionals on this list and I do not
think they have to blindly follow a method because some have decided they found
a new human reflex we did not know existed. To question is to gain und
erstanding. To disagree is to create dialogue that furthers understanding, even
if it does not lead to acceptance. I appreciate Dr. Karp's response though
it is very similar to the responses he provided in the past when the method of
swaddling was questioned. I do not consider his self defense any more
polite or respectful than Nikki's questioning. I have not found Nikki to be
anything but respectful over the years and I certainly do not see her questions
about this new method of parenting to be disrespectful. Dr. Karp has a new
book out. The title is Baby Bliss. He is not promoting his method only to the
few parents who have a very colicky baby who will not settle with more
natural methods of soothing. He is promoting his method to parents in general.
This is his right as an author and marketing for profit is going to be more
likely geared towards all parents than a few parents. If only the truly colicky
baby's parents were being targeted, the title would say so, but the profit
margin would be less.
I am an American pure capitalist so I respect his right to make a profit. I
even respect that he truly believes that this is a great thing for babies and
parents. I just also think the jury is still out and we are comparing apples
to carrots because we are not comparing the calm baby in a natural skin to
skin state to the 'calm' baby swaddled. We are comparing the screaming baby
to the quiet baby. No question parents and experts alike will prefer the
quiet baby. I am not sure we have the means or the understanding of the newborn
to really be sure that we are looking at a happy content quiet baby who has
had a 'reflex turned on'. What we see is the outcome and based on our
cultural bias for baby to be quiet and down, we like what we see.
I have a very long response to Dr. Karp in my waiting box, and when I feel I
have covered my concerns completely I will post it or maybe others will do
such a fine job I won't bother. It won't be anything different from my
concerns a few years ago. Just as he has not changed his response to the concerns
raised. People who believe babies need freedom of movement of hands to face
and the ability to wake early for a feeding cue will simply continue to
disagree. Dr. Karp knows the opinions of those who have them, but the opinions
is not of concern to him because he does not see it as valid. What he sees is
a baby who was screaming has stopped. The outcome justifies the means.
This is the general state of medicine for mothers and babies is it not? And
like other things, better safe than sorry, right? After all, he really is
right. Screaming babies stress out mothers and are a cause of abuse we need to
prevent at all costs. I can't argue with that at all. I agree that in
comparison to a baby abused I prefer a baby swaddled arms down, pacifier in place and
sleeping quietly for hours. Absolutely. It's all in perspective isn't it?
Take care,
Pam MazzellaDiBosco, IBCLC, RLC who is certainly not a doctor and not an
expert in infant psychology, but is a mother of seven children which is about
half of the babies used in the swaddling study and sleep arousal, and close to
the same number of the babies in each group.
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