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Wed, 26 Mar 1997 08:36:12 -0600 |
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I read with interest your announcement of a new interactive website for
parenting advice in this week's TIME Magazine. I saw with dismay that you
used a photograph of a mother bottle-feeding a baby as an image of good
parenting. Bottle-feeding may be common in our culture, but that doesn't
make it a good or healthy parenting choice. Bottle-feeding has been linked
to higher risk of many diseases of infancy and later life ranging from ear
infections to cancer (including breast cancer). Bottle-feeding children are
at a much higher risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, allergies, and
asthma, as well as lower IQ scores. Bottle-feeding her children instead of
breastfeeding them also raises the risk of a woman developing breast cancer.
Breastfeeding is the normal, natural, healthy way to feed a child. Please
reconsider using this image of bottle-feeding to promote your new website on
parenting advice.
Katherine A. Dettwyler, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Anthropology and Nutrition
Texas A&M University
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