New Growth
Curves for Breastfed Babies
If your doctor has told you that your baby is falling off her
growth curve and needs more to eat - the first thing you need to
do is make sure they're looking at the right growth curve.
Breastfed babies follow a different
growth curve than formula-fed babies - they tend to be slightly
larger in the first two months, then sometime around four
months, their growth slows significantly. Hmmm, wonder if this
is connected to the fact that formula-fed babies have a higher
risk of becoming overweight later in life.... You see, the
current growth charts are based on a population of formula-fed
babies, and breastfed babies are seen as "underweight" by
comparison. But in reality, if breastfeeding is taken as the
norm, are all those formula-fed babies really overweight?
The new growth curves have recently been
made available by the WHO and CDC - there is a nice
summary of their findings here with a few charts that can be
copied and printed out. The WHO charts were developed using only
exclusively breastfed babies, and have only released preliminary
findings so far. In 2000, the CDC released new growth charts
that reflect the proportion of breastfed babies in the overall
population, and they can be downloaded from
this website. The CDC charts do include formula-fed babies,
so will not be as useful for exclusively breastfed babies, but
will reflect growth patterns closer to normal (i.e. - not
formula-fed) than the previous charts. |