The CDC is now recommending HIV tests become part of routine health screens for all, treating it as an infectious disease rather than only a stigmatized one. Good.
Massachusetts is considering banning the new-mother bags with formula passed out in many hospitals. A number of local hospitals have already stopped passing out the Similac/Enfamil bags, giving materials promoting their hospital instead of the formula companies. While I don't want mothers to become stigmatized for using formula, I don't think it's necessary to promote it to new mothers as just as good for your baby as breastfeeding, plus more convenient, when it's been shown that breastfeeding provides health benefits formula is unable to duplicate.
I hadn't realized there were so many Native languages in Maine, many on the verge of vanishing, but now there's governmental support (monies, even) for keeping them alive and teaching them.
Better bacon: animal breeders and geneticists are working towards building a better pig. Related site: there are mappings of a number of animal genomes, allowing more careful breeding (theoretically, anyway).
Vote early, vote often: vote for what properties should be on a new Monopoly board (through May 12).
When you should lose your job for your beliefs: a judge in the Phillipines lost his job for consulting imaginary mystic dwarfs (three of them, Armand, Luis and Angel).
Massachusetts is considering banning the new-mother bags with formula passed out in many hospitals. A number of local hospitals have already stopped passing out the Similac/Enfamil bags, giving materials promoting their hospital instead of the formula companies. While I don't want mothers to become stigmatized for using formula, I don't think it's necessary to promote it to new mothers as just as good for your baby as breastfeeding, plus more convenient, when it's been shown that breastfeeding provides health benefits formula is unable to duplicate.
I hadn't realized there were so many Native languages in Maine, many on the verge of vanishing, but now there's governmental support (monies, even) for keeping them alive and teaching them.
... "When I hear English, I feel competitiveness," Roger Paul says. "Once I switch that worldview and start thinking in Indian, it's difficult to think back in English again."
Language preservationists argue it's important to keep languages, like animals, from extinction for the sake of diversity. "Every language provides us with more knowledge about human thinking and behavior ... and a unique perspective. So, when we lose a language, we lose a lot of knowledge," says Pauleena MacDougall, associate director of the Maine Folklife Center housed at the University of Maine in Orono. "It's almost like losing an animal. So what? Why do we care about it? Because it's something missing that should be here."
Better bacon: animal breeders and geneticists are working towards building a better pig. Related site: there are mappings of a number of animal genomes, allowing more careful breeding (theoretically, anyway).
Vote early, vote often: vote for what properties should be on a new Monopoly board (through May 12).
When you should lose your job for your beliefs: a judge in the Phillipines lost his job for consulting imaginary mystic dwarfs (three of them, Armand, Luis and Angel).
no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 02:21 pm (UTC)Monopoly
Date: 2006-05-09 02:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 02:38 pm (UTC)Re: Monopoly
Date: 2006-05-09 02:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 03:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 03:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 06:40 pm (UTC)I'm not sure whether barring formula companies from the hospital is the best solution. IMHO, women would be best served if hospitals made more use of their lactation consultants and made a discussion on breastfeeding and its benefit a standard part of the hospital stay. I'd also like to see WIC and its state-level analogues become more supportive of breastfeeding -- offering and encouraging access to experienced and empathetic LCs instead of just paying for formula. (This would be cost-effective, after all, since breast milk is, well, free and formula is costly.)
no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 07:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 07:53 pm (UTC)I've heard (I have no firsthand experience) that there are a few individual WIC caseworkers who are supportive of nursing. However, there seems to be a standard protocol in place to push formula, especially if the baby is not gaining weight at the "ideal" rate. (And breastfed babies do tend to gain a little more slowly than formula-fed babies.) There also seems to be considerable reliance on older info that is now questionable, such as the idea that four months is the best time to start solid foods and the belief that babies need to increase consumption of solids quickly. (Speaking from experience, not all babies take to solids immediately.) I'm sure mileage varies for each person involved in the system, but I've heard some horror stories.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 08:13 pm (UTC)Breastfed babies don't gain as quickly, but really, quality over quantity; it's not like they stay smaller throughout life. And I'd thought that the current guideline was solids starting at 6 months at the earliest. (And my nephew is proof that some kids aren't interested in solids that young.)
I know, preaching to the choir*, but how frustrating.
* Suddenly that feels far too xtian a turn of phrase, but I can't think of anything more neutral that's got the same connotation.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 10:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 10:26 pm (UTC)