Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Why baby knows best when it comes to food

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Why baby knows best when it comes to food

Spoon-feeding purée to our children is unnatural - and it could even

make them ill in the future, says lisa Barbieri

Published: 12 December 2006

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article2067856.ece

Just how much excitement can puréed carrot promote? Well, let me tell

you: a lot. When it's time to introduce solid food to your baby for the

first time, mashed-up root vegetables and fruit become symbolic and

magical foodstuffs. Unfortunately, baby's reaction rarely mirrors the

parental investment.

When I look back at weaning my own child on to solids, at six months, I

despair slightly. Hours spent steaming, puréeing and freezing carrot,

pear and sweet potato. Ages sat - not that I begrudge it - spoon-feeding

my daughter, who wasn't really interested until she was eight months

old. But then she got constipated, and although for a few months she

devoured whatever I gave her, at 13 months she was rejecting almost

everything. I had an instinct, based on nothing, that I should just

" leave her to it " with finger foods. But I had neither the confidence,

nor the facts, to back it up.

When my child was about 14 months old, I heard about Gill Rapley.

Rapley, a health visitor for 25 years and now deputy director of the

Unicef UK Baby Friendly Initiative, had pioneered Baby-led Weaning

(BLW). Or rather, she brought it back into fashion, since this was the

way we used to feed our babies before the multi-million-pound baby-food

industry made us believe we needed purées. Although the premise of BLW

was simple and logical, it went against much of the current thinking of

how we should feed babies.

Rapley had realised, after years observing babies, that they should be

in charge of what went into their mouths and when. " When I was a health

visitor, parents would come to me with the same three problems: 'my

child is constipated, my child is really picky', and they couldn't get

them on to second-stage baby food. So I started to wonder what would

happen if we never took the control away from them in the first place

and let them feed themselves. "

The idea behind BLW is that you should allow your baby access to a

variety of healthy finger foods and, provided he is sitting up straight,

and you are with him, leave him to feed himself with his hands. As long

as there are no known allergies in the family, you can give your child

pretty much anything, except for whole nuts if your child is under five.

This approach takes a leap of faith for many parents, but the benefits

are great.

First, a baby will take as much or as little as it needs; this approach,

Rapley has observed (she conducted a study in 2000/1), stops them

becoming constipated. Constipation is something that seems to trouble

many babies not long after solids are introduced; it's not certain why,

but it could be because if they are spoon-fed, they are fed more than

their young systems can handle.

Babies allowed to feed themselves tend to become less picky, develop

better hand control more quickly, and seem to avoid foods that they were

later found to be intolerant to. Another advantage is that babies can

eat what you're eating, so no " special cooking " . And definitely no puréeing.

Parents who have tried BLW tend to be evangelical about this method of

weaning. This is Kerry talking about her daughter, Faye. " People are

amazed at what she can manage to eat, even now that she's 14 months. She

has her own knife, fork and spoon at mealtimes and needs no help from us

at all. The thing I've enjoyed most, though, is leaving it up to her.

Watching her regulate her own appetite is lovely, I never worry about

how much or how little she's eaten. "

Parents may be concerned that their baby will choke.But although anyone,

in theory, can choke on anything, nature gives babies a natural

prevention against choking by teaching it to chew before it can swallow.

The risk factors are if a baby is not sat up straight, and if suction is

introduced, such as the action involved in sucking off a spoon.

Rapley explains: " Imagine eating tomato soup - you suck it in. Now

imagine eating minestrone, a mixture of liquid and solids. The way you

eat it is different, you can't suck it in, you chew it. " It's because of

this that purée-fed babies often refuse second-stage baby foods, which

involve lumps and purée. They don't know whether to suck or chew so, as

a natural defence mechanism, they do neither.

The premature introduction of solids isn't just a timing issue, it can

have implications on a baby's health. If a baby is not ready for solids,

it can stress an immature system, and has been implicated in

compromising appetite control (which can contribute to obesity) and can

make a child more susceptible to allergies. Introducing solids is a

complex physiological state the baby has to arrive at; he has to be

immunologically ready, he has to be able to produce the enzymes to

digest the food and he has to have lost the tongue-thrust reflex and be

able to chew and swallow food.

Tongue thrust is a protective mechanism that all babies have - but it

can be overridden by spoon-feeding. Their tongues will push out anything

they can't handle. As a baby gets older, its tongue-thrust reflex is

triggered further back in the mouth until it eventually disappears.

I started letting my child eat what she wanted, when she wanted, at 14

months. Others around me panic about how little she eats, but I've since

learned that children, if not interfered with, will naturally regulate

their appetites: eat to fuel growth, stop when they're full and, if

given a good selection of foodstuffs, will automatically take what

nutrients they need.

Obesity studies have shown that children aren't meant to put on too much

weight too quickly. Sadly, at 40, it's too late for me to do the

baby-led weaning diet. But it's a thought.

Baby-led Weaning: A Developmental Approach to the Introduction of Solid

Foods by Gill Rapley is available on DVD, £25, from

www.markittelevision.co.uk; 0. lisa Barbieri is

co-founder of www.iwantmymum.com

Just how much excitement can puréed carrot promote? Well, let me tell

you: a lot. When it's time to introduce solid food to your baby for the

first time, mashed-up root vegetables and fruit become symbolic and

magical foodstuffs. Unfortunately, baby's reaction rarely mirrors the

parental investment.

When I look back at weaning my own child on to solids, at six months, I

despair slightly. Hours spent steaming, puréeing and freezing carrot,

pear and sweet potato. Ages sat - not that I begrudge it - spoon-feeding

my daughter, who wasn't really interested until she was eight months

old. But then she got constipated, and although for a few months she

devoured whatever I gave her, at 13 months she was rejecting almost

everything. I had an instinct, based on nothing, that I should just

" leave her to it " with finger foods. But I had neither the confidence,

nor the facts, to back it up.

When my child was about 14 months old, I heard about Gill Rapley.

Rapley, a health visitor for 25 years and now deputy director of the

Unicef UK Baby Friendly Initiative, had pioneered Baby-led Weaning

(BLW). Or rather, she brought it back into fashion, since this was the

way we used to feed our babies before the multi-million-pound baby-food

industry made us believe we needed purées. Although the premise of BLW

was simple and logical, it went against much of the current thinking of

how we should feed babies.

Rapley had realised, after years observing babies, that they should be

in charge of what went into their mouths and when. " When I was a health

visitor, parents would come to me with the same three problems: 'my

child is constipated, my child is really picky', and they couldn't get

them on to second-stage baby food. So I started to wonder what would

happen if we never took the control away from them in the first place

and let them feed themselves. "

The idea behind BLW is that you should allow your baby access to a

variety of healthy finger foods and, provided he is sitting up straight,

and you are with him, leave him to feed himself with his hands. As long

as there are no known allergies in the family, you can give your child

pretty much anything, except for whole nuts if your child is under five.

This approach takes a leap of faith for many parents, but the benefits

are great.

First, a baby will take as much or as little as it needs; this approach,

Rapley has observed (she conducted a study in 2000/1), stops them

becoming constipated. Constipation is something that seems to trouble

many babies not long after solids are introduced; it's not certain why,

but it could be because if they are spoon-fed, they are fed more than

their young systems can handle.

Babies allowed to feed themselves tend to become less picky, develop

better hand control more quickly, and seem to avoid foods that they were

later found to be intolerant to. Another advantage is that babies can

eat what you're eating, so no " special cooking " . And definitely no puréeing.

Parents who have tried BLW tend to be evangelical about this method of

weaning. This is Kerry talking about her daughter, Faye. " People are

amazed at what she can manage to eat, even now that she's 14 months. She

has her own knife, fork and spoon at mealtimes and needs no help from us

at all. The thing I've enjoyed most, though, is leaving it up to her.

Watching her regulate her own appetite is lovely, I never worry about

how much or how little she's eaten. "

Parents may be concerned that their baby will choke.But although anyone,

in theory, can choke on anything, nature gives babies a natural

prevention against choking by teaching it to chew before it can swallow.

The risk factors are if a baby is not sat up straight, and if suction is

introduced, such as the action involved in sucking off a spoon.

Rapley explains: " Imagine eating tomato soup - you suck it in. Now

imagine eating minestrone, a mixture of liquid and solids. The way you

eat it is different, you can't suck it in, you chew it. " It's because of

this that purée-fed babies often refuse second-stage baby foods, which

involve lumps and purée. They don't know whether to suck or chew so, as

a natural defence mechanism, they do neither.

The premature introduction of solids isn't just a timing issue, it can

have implications on a baby's health. If a baby is not ready for solids,

it can stress an immature system, and has been implicated in

compromising appetite control (which can contribute to obesity) and can

make a child more susceptible to allergies. Introducing solids is a

complex physiological state the baby has to arrive at; he has to be

immunologically ready, he has to be able to produce the enzymes to

digest the food and he has to have lost the tongue-thrust reflex and be

able to chew and swallow food.

Tongue thrust is a protective mechanism that all babies have - but it

can be overridden by spoon-feeding. Their tongues will push out anything

they can't handle. As a baby gets older, its tongue-thrust reflex is

triggered further back in the mouth until it eventually disappears.

I started letting my child eat what she wanted, when she wanted, at 14

months. Others around me panic about how little she eats, but I've since

learned that children, if not interfered with, will naturally regulate

their appetites: eat to fuel growth, stop when they're full and, if

given a good selection of foodstuffs, will automatically take what

nutrients they need.

Obesity studies have shown that children aren't meant to put on too much

weight too quickly. Sadly, at 40, it's too late for me to do the

baby-led weaning diet. But it's a thought.

Baby-led Weaning: A Developmental Approach to the Introduction of Solid

Foods by Gill Rapley is available on DVD, £25, from

www.markittelevision.co.uk; 0. lisa Barbieri is

co-founder of http://www.iwantmymum.com

*

The material in this post is distributed without

profit to those who have expressed a prior interest

in receiving the included information for research

and educational purposes.For more information go to:

http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

http://oregon.uoregon.edu/~csundt/documents.htm

If you wish to use copyrighted material from this

email for purposes that go beyond 'fair use', you

must obtain permission from the copyright owner*.*

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...