A woman on another list to which I belong has claimed that formula is 'better' for newborns and infants than breast milk which is being produced for a toddler. She uses as the foundation for this assertion the fact that the milk bank to which she donated will not accept milk from donors whose babies are older than 5 months, for the above-stated reasons. I realize that the composition of breast milk changes as one's baby grows, becomes a toddler, etc., but I find it difficult to believe that at _any_ point, breastmilk could be inferior to formula for an infant. At _most_, and this is really pushing it, to my mind, I might be able to readily believe that if one is feeding an infant breast milk made for a toddler, that some sort of supplement (vitamins? fat? formula?) might be something to consider. Does anyone have any definitive information on this? Sites to studies, etc. would also be apprciated. Thanks! Anne Jessica - 8/28/78 William - 4/11/98 I am: Mom, Attorney, Professor, Childbirth Educator (in training) Founder & Director - Western N.Y. Mother's Milk Drive (1978-1979) My own favourite baby-related tips: http://www.dadsrights.org/annie/kidtips.html [NOTE: To reply by email, be sure to remove the spamblock!] *********************************************** The LACTNET mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software together with L-Soft's LSMTP(TM) mailer for lightning fast mail delivery. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html