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OUR BABIES

By Hygeia.

Published under the auspices o? Jbe Royal New Zealand Society for th Health of Women and Children (Plunket Society.) “It is wiser to put up & fence at the top of a precipice than to maintain an ambulance at the bottom.

THE TRANSITIONAL PERIOD, The “transitional period” is the name we sometimes apply to t c stage following the end of the baby s .ninth month. It is a stage of transition in many ways—transition rom milk to mixed foods, from suckling to eating and drinking, from comparative inarticulateness to possession of powers of speech, from complete dependence to the joys of free locomotion. What stirring times! What rapid development! So rapid indeed that we arc apt to forget the “transition in the accomplished facts. Nevertheless all this development is accomplished by a gradual merging of one stage into the next, and it is very important not to lose isight of the fact that baby’s digestive and nervous system need safe guarding irom strain during this period of rapid development. It is well to keep the ideal of “gradualnes.s” always in mind. Remember the axiom “Never make a sudden.change.” The digestive organs have so far been accustomed to dealing only or almost only with milk in ;some form. They need educating to deal with other, foods by a process of “gradual transition.” Much digestive trouble at a later stage is attributable to too sudden and too early introduction of a large variety of foods. Somewhat the same tiling applies to methods of taking food. Hitherto the baby hais been accustomed solely or almost solely, to obtaining his food by suckling, often at the breast. Sudden weaning throws a strain on the nervous system as well as the digestion. Wise is tlie mother who has trained her baby to drink water or his fruit or vegetable juice from a cup previous to this period (tins applies to the artificially fed baby as well as the breast fed), as the few minutes spent daily at this task will have prepared her baby for the gradual change from sucking to drinking from a cun. The second nine months or baby’s life are supremely important from the point of view of education—-the child is learning all the time. It is the bounden duty of parents to see that he learn s to do right things in a right way. The foundations of character and good or had mental health are laid down during this period no less surely than the foundations of purely physical health.

LEARNING TO EAT. To come back to practical consideration of the question of food, a point which is often overlooked is the fact that a properly graded milk mixture continues to supply all the essential food elements and by far the greatest part of the actual nourishment needed during the whole of the first year. Food other than milk As mainly of importance from the point of view of educating baby to feel aii.d taste, and digestion of solid and i->emi-sol id foods. The essential thing during this period is that he should learn how to eat.

He should learn to eat from a spoon and drink from a cup, and. most important of all, should learn to chew his crusts and bones, and reject solid object;! which he- cannot reduce to pulp by biting, tearing,, mouthing and chewing. Once learnt, this lesson will stand him in good stead throughout his life, helping to protect him from indigestion, decayed teeth, and many other evils, which come iiv the train of these two. Also he will he much less likely to swallow foreign bodies off the floor or elsewhere than, the baby with whom the act of swallowing is almost- automatically simultaneous with the placing of anything in the mouth.

THE BEST KIND OF HARD FOODS.

Twice-baked bread is the best form of “hard” food for the baby of this age. The bread should be about; oneday old, and a slice about' threequarters of an inch thick should be cut in fingers and baked in a slow oven. Enough may be done for several days and kept in a well-shut tin. These home-made rusks are hard and yet not tough, and do, not have the tendency to break,off in the leathery, slithery lumps which make ordinary crusts dangerous. All the same,, the baby should never he left alone with any sort of crusts. If the gums are sore for a few weeks, he may be able to tackle a softer kind of crusts, but.ais soon- as.-possible teach him to eat- the twice-baked bread. •

CEREAL FOODS. In addition to milk and crush', the baby should learn to eat semi-solid cereal 5 foods, the most important of which is well-cooked, strained oatmealporridge—“oat jelly.” This may be varied by barley f rice, or wheatmeal, etc., hut' oatmeal is the main standby. It should be given as firm jelly arid unsweetened. HUMANISED MILK. Mothers often ask, “Is it necessary to make humanised milk after nine months or after 'the baby is wearied? Without' exception, babies under one year should .be weaned bn tb'iiumaiiised milk, and every baby should continue to have part of .the day’s allowance of milk humanised (or modified) until the end of the first year or later. The additional -sugar and fat used in making humanised milk ss'.a- necessary part of the'baby’s dipt. The small amount of mixed foods taken before a year of age do not make up for the lack of these ingredients in the food if the milk is given -simply diluted without suitable additions of sugar and fat.

-During this period -properly modified milk is tho most important part of the . diet from the .point of view-of nutrition, whilst from ihb- point-of view, of 'education various hard foods and cepeal foods are ’- specially 'important. Neither can replace the other. The child must have an - adequate amount of milk and, also daily lessons in chewing . and eating, if ho ds to- reach-his. fimt birthday, well up to the mark m ovory wav•(» r week we will describe in de* tail a few. practical points in connection with the introduction- o{ fifty? foods between nine randf eighteen months ,of ege—small points' whmi sometimes present difficulties...i-A// ": ‘ •• .; *■ >■ ..

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19341110.2.67

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 12398, 10 November 1934, Page 10

Word Count
1,039

OUR BABIES Gisborne Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 12398, 10 November 1934, Page 10

OUR BABIES Gisborne Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 12398, 10 November 1934, Page 10

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