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Date: | Sun, 28 Sep 2008 14:55:03 -0400 |
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Thank you all for your citations :o) I am thrilled to find that many of
these, I've already incorporated, and have Marsha mentioned specifically!
(Thank you, Marsha, for your work compiling the formula recalls, found on
the naba-breastfeeding.org website!)
I think my biggest problem with this paper is that there is so much
information. I should focus on one issue, either the risks of powdered
formula, or the issue of nurses providing powdered formula to patients, but
which to choose?? It's only supposed to be 5 pages...
Best wishes,
Sam
We're going to Candy Mountain, Charlie!
<<
WHO says 8 weeks, adjusted:
"There appear to be two distinct infant risk groups for E. sakazakii
infection: premature
infants who develop bacteraemia after one month of age, and term infants
who develop meningitis during the
neonatal period. Therefore, the FAO/WHO expert working group (2006)
concluded that while infants appear to
be the group at particular risk, neonates and also those less than two
months of age are at greatest risk (FAO/
WHO, 2006)."
1.3 Populations at greatest risk of infection
http://www.who.int/foodsafety/publications/micro/pif_guidelines.pdf
Morgan Gallagher
>>
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