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Date: | Thu, 19 Jun 2008 14:51:39 EDT |
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Jeanne writes:
Question: If this is indeed a function of baby's metabolism, rather than a
change in breastmilk components, then how come the amounts of formula
continue to need to increase over time, while breastmilk needs don't? We frequently
see artificially fed babies taking 6-8 oz bottles as they get
older! I'm really curious about where the difference comes from...
~~ The babies I notice taking those huge bottles are not getting many a day,
are often only getting 4 bottles a day, so their total intake might not be
getting higher mom just puts more in fewer bottles. That said many bottlefed
babies of any age are getting overfed, starting right in the hospital nursery
on Day One getting an ounce of formula in a few minutes of chugging. They many
have been unable to ever really get on the normal path of following their
own hunger and satiation signals. Of course another issue is that metabolism,
the gut, and the mother's milk is changing. Formula is always the same.
Peace,
Judy
Judy LeVan Fram, PT, IBCLC, LLLL
Brooklyn, NY, USA
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