I'm suggesting length as the measurement to study because
a heavier than average baby could be considered heavy due to possible overfeeding.
A newborn who is lighter or
heavier than the average baby is probably perfectly fine but might receive extra attention from the doctors and nurses after delivery just to make sure there are no problems.
Not exact matches
But at 3 and 6 months, breastfed boys are
heavier on
average than a group of breastfed and bottle - fed
babies.
However if you have a
heavy wetter you will likely need to change
baby at a higher frequency
than average.
1) Significantly older
than the «
average» sugar
baby shown on SA marketing methods 2) Significantly
heavier in weight, far from the «ideal» posted on the website marketing materials 3) Mostly uneducated women / lower class women 4) Most angry / embittered women who feel entitled despite being far outside of the «ideal» that SA markets on its website materials.