Sentences with phrase «fed infants whose»

Not exact matches

The only witnesses are the animals in whose feeding trough the infant is laid, and a small band of simple sheepherders from the nearby hills.
A little earlier than I was referring but I think they just steadily improved practices of infant feeding over time because there was significant mortality associated with «artificial feeding,» though it was less the milk itself (my husband says they traditional gave goats milk to babies whose mothers couldn't feed them), than the practices associated with delivering non-human milk to infants (e.g., dirty bottle teats, spoiled milk).
Women living in 3rd world countries (and perhaps those few living in backwaters of developed countries) whose time really is «worth nothing» in the labor market, are not reading the SOB for tips on how to save money on infant feeding.
This is due to the high levels of lactose and vitamin C in human milk, which aid in the absorption of iron, and 3) breastfed babies do not lose iron through their bowels as do formula - fed infants, whose intestines develop fissures from damage caused by cow's milk.
I also don't find much mystery in the prevalence of the formula feeding of infants whose mothers have returned to work.
Although a few reports of late onset GBS in infants whose mothers also expressed GBS in their breastmilk are described in the literature, with the standard medical treatment of breastmilk as just some infectious bodily fluid, no studies are to be found specifically comparing overall GBS infections in infants to presence or absence of exclusive human milk feeding.
WHO and UNICEF jointly developed the Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding whose aim is to improve - through optimal feeding - the nutritional status, growth and development, health, and thus the very survival of infants and young chFeeding whose aim is to improve - through optimal feeding - the nutritional status, growth and development, health, and thus the very survival of infants and young chfeeding - the nutritional status, growth and development, health, and thus the very survival of infants and young children.
Nestle's roots go back to the 1860s development by Henri Nestle, a pharmacist, of the first infant formula for babies whose mothers who could not breast feed.
Mother - infant skin - to - skin contact and direct breastfeeding should be encouraged as early as feasible.204, 205 Fortification of expressed human milk is indicated for many very low birth weight infants.13 Banked human milk may be a suitable feeding alternative for infants whose mothers are unable or unwilling to provide their own milk.
That success led to the Junior League of Evanston creating the Evanston Hospital Milk Bank, which received worldwide recognition for transporting breast milk from healthy mothers to infants whose mother could not breast - feed.
All mother and father pairs of healthy, term, normal birth weight infants who were born between October 1, 2002, and January 31, 2003, were enrolled; unmarried women, mothers who had decided to bottle feed, and parents whose infants were admitted to the ICU were excluded from the study.
This could reassure mothers whose infants are struggling to feed that it's not their fault.
This could reassure mothers whose infants are struggling to feed that it's not their fault.
Conversely, infants whose mothers were well - fed are often born larger and are more likely to grow bigger more rapidly, requiring more calories to maintain their larger bodies that can make them more attractive mates.
In the final passage of Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, a man narrowly escapes starvation by feeding at the breast of a woman whose infant child has died.
This can include an extremely young animal (s) whose mother was killed and the infant now needs continual, round the clock feedings with special formula, a dog with heart worm, an FIV positive cat, an animal requiring surgery resulting from an accident or animal cruelty, etc..
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