Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

OUR BABIES

(BY

HYGEIA.)

Published under the auspices of the. Royal New Zealand Society for the Health of Women and Children (Plus bet Society.) “It is -wiser to put up a fence at the top of a precipice than to maintain an ambulance at the bottom.'* ' FEEDING BABY IN THE FIRST i MONTH OF LlFE.—(Continued.) j This wook wc conclude the article by Miss McMillan, quoted from the Australian Women’s Mirror:— Signs That Baby is Getting tlie Eight Amount of Milk From His Mother. “The chief -sighs thwfc a young baby is getting enough breast milk are: (1) Normal sleep; (2) gain in weight (about 1 oz a day after the first week of life when the breast milk should be established); (3) one of three bowel actions each 24 hours.

Signs of Underfeeding. “The chief signs of a young baby not getting enough breast milk are: (1)5 Failure to gain, weight; (2) infrequent' and lack of bowel actions. “An underfed baby may deep quite' well l —in fact, be drowsy—during the first month of life. Sleeplessness in a very young baby i*s more often caused Iby too much breast milk than, too little. “If everything is not going smooth-* ly the only fair thing to the baby is to test weight before and after the breast feeding for 24 hours to estimate the amount of breast milik the baby is getting from its mother. The way to do this is t*ld on page 57 of ‘Feeding and Care of Baby/ by Sir Truby King. “If you discover the baby is getting too much bieast milk you can shorten the length of feeding, and if he is fed more often then four-hourly you can give fewer feedings. If the baby is underfed you can give extra food after! each breast feeding to make up the, necessary amount that the baby should * have in. the 24 hours. “There are methods for increasing the breast milk; but the main things! to do are to put baby to the breast regularly to have proper rest and sleep, ' fresh air and (later) exercise, to be happy and not to worry—and you cannot help being a good nursing mother. There are cases where the breast milk, has not been established till the third and fourth week, and. even later than that; but do not give up putting the baby regularly to the breast, and give] the artificial food only after the breast' feeding, not instead of it,” Memo, by “Hygeia” Re Overfeeding. More or less overfeeding is a much more common and serious mistake in the first month or iso than is usually realsed, and it is important for moth-’ ers to know the warning signs. Prolonged overfeeding produces a very serious condition, because the whole digestive system is overtaxed, and if the overfeeding is allowed to go on ; there comes a nutritional disturbance from which it may take weeks for the baby to recover fully. Whereas simple underfeeding is quite easily corrected, and unless the baby has drifted along for some time and has got into a very low state, the temporary halt in weight-gain is usually made up for very quickly when the food is increased up to the full allowance. Signs of Overfeeding.

The usual warning signs that baby is getting too- much milk are these: (1) Rapid gain in weight; (2) restlessness, “wind,” and disturbed sleep; (3) frequent or greenish motions; (4) some “putting up” of food. If these signs are disregarded, and the overfeeding goes on, the weight becomes erratic or stationary. Then baby may begin to lose weight, be» cause the overtaxed digestion can no longer deal with even the best of food. When this happens the only thing to do is to rest the digestive organs. Keep baby entirely off food for, say, 12 hours. Then give warm boiled water by bottle before the breast at each feed, only gradually working back to full feedings. With regard to weight—unless he is “making up for lost time”—the baby of average size who puts on more than loz per day (say 41b a week) is quite likely heading for trouble, and it is well to have him “test-weighed” to find out just how much milk he is getting in 24 hours and to regulate matters accordingly. Surely it is much better to have Coz or Boz a week good steady gain than lOoz or 12oz which may be lost next week because of an attack of indigestion.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAG19290319.2.54

Bibliographic details

Wairarapa Age, 19 March 1929, Page 6

Word Count
747

OUR BABIES Wairarapa Age, 19 March 1929, Page 6

OUR BABIES Wairarapa Age, 19 March 1929, Page 6