@Tinkrbl44 wrote:
@novamc1 wrote:
Saw a TV news report yesterday about hospitals being very concerned about the status of some babies who are landing in their care in poor condition.
Two specific ones were babies unfortunately born with something called "short bowel syndrome" which prevents them from digesting regular formula. It was described as a very serious problem that hospitals are facing if proper formulations of baby food are not available.
The right formula for the right baby is the right formula---apparently no exceptions when a baby needs it.
Any thought that babies can survive on Karo syrup mixtures and other homemade solutions seems totally based on opinion, not science.
@novamc1
I'm still shocked to think that people used to feed babies condensed milk and concentrated sugar syrup!
(I also wonder if that contributed to an increase of diabetes in children?)
Yes, babies could "survive" on that mixture short term, I guess, but why would anyone feed a baby something with no nurtitional value? Who would ever do that?
I was one of those babies fed sweetened condensed milk and water. I was born six weeks early, and I am guessing that this is what I was fed in the hospital. My baby formula recipe, written in the doctor's handwriting, is in my baby book.
I am now 61. I have not been back in a hospital since I was born. I have no chronic medical conditions, and I am not on any medications. I am not diabetic, and I am not overweight.
But I sure do have a sweet tooth. Even today, when I open a can of sweetened condensed milk for a recipe, I have to scrape out the can for a taste.