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Thu, 2 Aug 2007 19:19:45 -0400 |
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Andrea Peyser seems a bit confused when she accuses the city of being the Gestapo for
banning the so-called "free" formula bags. First of all, her comment trivializes Holocaust
victims. There is no logical connection between murderers and public health officials
trying to improve the health and survival of infants. Secondly, she doesn't understand
simple economics. There is no such thing as a free lunch or “gift” from a for profit
company. The industry makes huge profit off the so-called “free” samples by including
the cost of production, shipping, advertising, etc. in the price of the product that the
mother will need to buy once she runs out of the free samples. Because more low-
income mothers end up using more formula they disproportionately bear the burden of
the costs of this so-called "free" products once they get started and must continue to use
it because their milk supply dries up. Then rather than talking to researchers in human
nutrition, she consults a psychiatrist. Asking a psychiatrist about research on infant
nutrition makes as much sense as asking a podiatrist about research on anti-depressants.
As a nutritional epidemiologist, the peer-reviewed articles I have read on the risks of not
breastfeeding would fill more than a filing cabinet. Finally, to accuse researchers of
making up data is simply slander unless you can document it. The only documented case
of data fabrication in the field of infant nutrition that I know about was a researcher
named Chandra in Canada who bilked the formula industry out of huge amounts of
research money and was finally caught by a graduate student who noticed that it was not
physically possible for anyone to have collected data on the number of infants he claimed
to have observed in his research. Really, the propaganda machine here is not the city,
but those who have convinced us of the illogical statement that breastfeeding is better,
but formula is just as good. If one thing is better, the other is not as good. And what
research is there that supports Andrea Peyser's claim that breastfeeding causes suicide?
Oh please, get a grip and check your facts before scaring women half to death that they
will suicide if they breastfeed. Talk about a guilt trip! Susan E. Burger, MHS, PhD, IBCLC
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