… says Christy P, forwarding me another article about a study that will be said to show that co-sleeping is dangerous.
“Here we go again…”
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Comments
7 responses to ““Here we go again…””
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I brought the article up with my med students yesterday (not the epi students who are yet to receive the assignment) and believe it or not, there was general outrage. They thought I was going to rant about co-sleeping instead of poor assessment of exposure and outcomes. That’s the real problem with these studies. You can’t combine suffocation + SIDS + other/unknown cause of death into one outcome. That’s silly.
Regarding the occasional bed-sharing, how many times have you heard “my kid was sick so he slept with me”. Hmmm, let’s take two unusual situations, put them together and then cast wide aspersions.
With the med students I also used it as a nice excuse to talk about breastfeeding because they don’t get enough of that.LikeLike
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Were the med students generally outraged in advance because they thought you were going to rant about co-sleeping? Did their outrage subside after you ranted about assessment of exposure and outcomes instead?
I’m kind of curious what kind of reputation you’re getting among medical students. The breastfeeding-obsessed epidemiologist? ๐LikeLike
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Oh, good GRIEF! I read stuff like that and I wonder how the species did not die off long ago — from sheer stupidity! And then I wonder if anyone who did the lovely little “study” spent any time at all observing real babies in well-adjusted and ordinary households. I mean ever. Have they ever met a family that did not fit such a goofy research model?
(“breastfeeding-obsessed epidemiologist” … LOL!! Can we clone her? The science community could use a few such people. And just what was the outrage? I want to know too.)LikeLike
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http://www.exceptionalmarriages.com/weblog/BlogDetail.asp?ID=41453
We blogged this as well, and there is a link above to a good response to the study showing its flaws.
Thanks for keeping up with this important issue.LikeLike
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I am sure the world needs only one Christy P, but here’s to her having many “academic descendants.”
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Indeed there was one outspoken father who was outraged at the thought that I was going to speak against co-sleeping. I have only had this crop of students for 4 days, so he hadn’t figured out just how often I can work breastfeeding into a lecture. It’s dangerous to give a LLL Leader control over an otherwise unstructured 4-week public health rotation. One of the students this time has a newborn that she is exclusively BF, and she asked about pumping breaks. I said sure, but why not bring the baby to class and offered to teach her how to operate the sling that she has but hasn’t figured out!
A couple of years ago when I had an undergraduate class for a semester of ‘global public health’ one of the questions on the final exam was a fill in the blank of the WHO breastfeeding recs, and the few that missed it guessed HIGH. They thought that WHO suggested exclusive BF for 12 months and continuation for 4 years (rather than exclusive BF for 6 months and continuation to at least age 2 and thereafter as mutually desired)LikeLike
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why not bring the baby to class and offered to teach her how to operate the sling that she has but hasn’t figured out!<<
Delicious!LikeLike