All posts by Amy Tuteur, MD

Glasses and the absurdity of promoting the biological norm in birth or breastfeeding

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Vision is arguably the most important of our 5 senses.

It allows us to see a grain of salt, a mountain in the distance and everything in between. It is the key to game hunting, to precision manufacturing, to hitting a home run. It is 100% natural. All human beings are “designed” to see.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]C-sections and formula are like glasses and contacts: widely necessary and lifesaving despite the biological “norm.”[/pullquote]

Curiously, despite the centrality of vision to our existence and despite the fact that it is natural, the incidence of poor vision is extraordinarily high. Approximately 30% of Americans are nearsighted; approximately 30% of Americans are farsighted; an equal proportion of Americans suffer from astigmatism. These impairments of vision can occur alone and in combination. Indeed, there are many people over age 40 who are both nearsighted, farsighted and have astigmatism.

What does that tell us?

It tells us that even critical natural functions don’t work properly a large proportion of the time and that high failure rates are completely compatible with the survival of the species.

Now consider vision correction. Over 60% of Americans use glasses/contacts for vision correction.

Are people who need vision correction abnormal or unnatural? Of course not.

Are people who use glasses or contact lenses “giving in” to the inconvenience of not being able to see? That’s absurd.

Does a book written by someone wearing reading glasses have less merit than one written by someone with 20/20 vision? No.

Is a touchdown pass drilled to the receiver by a quarterback wearing contact lenses not really a touchdown? No.

If a nearsighted climber summits Mount Everest wearing glasses, is it a lesser achievement than if she had done the same thing without glasses? Absolutely not.

Why not? Because we judge achievements by the outcome, not the process. It makes no difference if someone needs vision correction to complete their activities or daily living or to fulfill their wildest dreams. The achievement is not marred by the need for vision correct.

And, importantly, 20/20 vision without glasses is not, in and of itself, an achievement.

Now consider childbirth.

It is critical to our existence, and women are “designed” to give birth. Curiously, despite the centrality of childbirth to our existence, and despite the fact that it is natural, the natural incidence of perinatal and maternal death is relatively high. It’s only a fraction as high as the incidence of faulty vision, but the death rates are far from trivial.

What does that tell us?

It tells us that even critical natural functions don’t work properly a large proportion of the time, and the obstetricians who point that out are not “pathologizing” birth, they’re simply stating a fact. Many women will need interventions (childbirth “correction,” if you will) to survive childbirth and for the baby to survive birth alive and healthy.

Are the births of women who need childbirth interventions abnormal or unnatural? Of course not.

Are women who choose pain relief in childbirth “giving in” to the pain? That’s absurd.

Is a baby born by C-section less intelligent, talented or valuable than a baby born by unmedicated vaginal delivery? No.

If a woman gives birth with every intervention known to man, is the result an “unnatural” or abnormal baby? No.

Is the birth of that baby any less joyous or worthy of celebration than the birth of a baby born by unmedicated vaginal birth? No.

Is the birth of that baby any less an achievement than the birth of a baby by unmedicated childbirth? Absolutely not.

Why not? Because we judge achievements by the outcome, not the process. It makes no difference whether a woman needs childbirth interventions. It is the baby that is the achievement, not the presence of absence of interventions.

The same arguments can be made about breastfeeding. Yes, it’s natural. Yes, women are “designed” to breastfeed. Nonetheless a substantial proportion of women and babies will have difficulty with breastfeeding.

Are women who don’t breastfeed abnormal or unnatural? No.

Are woman who choose to formula feed “giving in” to the difficulties. No.

Are babies nourished with formula any less intelligent, talented or valuable than babies nourished with breastmilk? Of course not.

Is raising that baby into a healthy happy child with formula any less of an achievement than doing the same with breastmilk? That’s absurd. The achievement is the healthy, happy baby, not the breastfeeding.

The bottom line is that a home run with vision correction is better than a strikeout without it. A healthy baby born with the assistance of a myriad of interventions is better than a sick or dead baby born without them. A healthy formula fed toddler is better than a stunted toddler who is breastfed.

Some women want to view unmedicated vaginal birth and breastfeeding as achievements, but that says more about them and their fragile self-esteem (or the source of their income as midwives and lactation consultants) than it says about childbirth or breastfeeding.

C-sections and formula are like glasses and contacts: widely necessary and lifesaving despite the biological “norm.”

Breastfeeding and conflicts of interest

Conflict of interest sign written in a notepad.

Financial conflicts of interest loom large in our evaluation of research and they should. But financial conflicts of interest are not limited to the impact of big corporations.

It is easy to understand how formula companies might represent a major conflict of interest in research about the benefits of breastfeeding; no one has any trouble recognizing that researchers who receive financial payments from formula companies might be tempted, possibly only subconsciously, to tilt research findings in favor of their financial sponsors. That’s why it is so important to for researchers to disclose any industry association. It doesn’t mean that the research is wrong or biased, but it helps readers evaluate the legitimacy of the claims within scientific papers.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Lactation professionals are no different from surgeons when it comes to conflicts of interest in promoting their skill set.[/pullquote]

But money is money whether it comes from a large formula corporation or from elsewhere. Arguably, those whose entire income depends on promoting breastfeeding are even more vulnerable to financial conflicts of interest in breastfeeding research than those who receive payments or sponsorships from formula companies.

If payments from formula companies disappeared, the researchers who received them could still conduct research and would still receive salaries from their institutions. But if your entire job depended on finding benefits to breastfeeding — for example if you were employed by the breastfeeding industry — you’d have a very powerful financial conflict of interest to exaggerate the benefits of breastfeeding, as powerful as that stimulated by any formula company payments.

Such conflicts of interest occur all the time in medicine. For example, many types of cancer can be treated by surgery or radiation or chemotherapy or some combination of two or all three. We recognize that surgeons have a vested interest in promoting surgery, radiation oncologists in promoting radiation oncology and medical oncologists in promoting chemotherapy. That’s why many physicians, myself included, routinely recommend second and even third opinions before embarking on cancer treatment. It is only by learning the perspective of different professionals that patients can gain the best understanding of their treatment options.

Lactation professionals are no different from surgeons when it comes to conflicts of interest in promoting their skill set. Their recommendations about the benefits of breastfeeding, therefore, should be treated no differently than a surgeons’ recommendations about the benefits of surgery. It doesn’t mean they are venal and it doesn’t mean that they are wrong. It just means that their financial conflict of interest should never be forgotten.

Financial conflicts of interest are not the only conflicts of interest that can affect research results and professional recommendations.

That’s the point that Richard Saver seeks to make in Is It Really All About The Money? Reconsidering Non-Financial Interests In Medical Research:

Concern about financial ties crowds out consideration of other influences that may bias research conduct. But why? This article argues that we under-prioritize non-financial interests at our peril…

Making Sense of Non-Financial Competing Interests, written by the editors of PLoS Medicine offers examples:

Imagine you’re a peer reviewer who’s received a request to referee a paper. The paper reports the results of a study using cell lines derived from an aborted fetus as a diagnostic tool in identifying certain viral infections. You are also a member of a religious organization morally opposed to fetal cell research. In your review, you raise questions about the study’s validity and methodology that might undermine the paper’s chance of publication.

Imagine you’re an editor and you receive a paper from the scientist who supervised your postdoctoral fellowship. It’s been a couple of years since you left his lab, but he has supported your career and you have warm feelings toward him; plus you still join your former lab mates occasionally at their monthly pub night. You select sympathetic reviewers and you fight hard for the paper at the editorial meeting.

Such conflicts of interest may be even more important than financial conflicts of interest:

Non-financial competing interests (sometimes called “private interests”) can be personal, political, academic, ideological, or religious. Like financial interests, they can influence professional judgment… Indeed, because professional affinities and rivalries, nepotism, scientific or technological competition, religious beliefs, and political or ideological views are often the fuels for our passions and for our careers, private competing interests are perhaps even more potent than financial ones.

It’s not hard to imagine the private interests of breastfeeding researchers. Most have staked their entire research careers on the belief that breastfeeding is the “best” way to feed babies because it has substantial medical benefits. They have a vested psychological interest in promoting breastfeeding and even when their findings don’t support the foundational belief that breastfeeding is best, they are generally spun to ignore that reality or are dismissed with the claim that the failure to find benefits reflects a cultural “lack of support” for breastfeeding. Moreover, there are reports that suggest that over the past decades it has been nearly impossible to get acceptance for publication of papers that dispute the benefits of breastfeeding.

How can we address these non-financial conflicts of interest? With disclosure, policy and research.

Disclosure:

It’s necessary to establish a standard by which authors, reviewers, and editors are required to disclose whether they have non-financial interests that (1) might influence their reporting or review of the paper and/or (2) would negatively or positively be influenced by the publication of the paper… For example, authors should declare if they serve on the editorial board of the journal to which they are submitting or if they have acted as an expert witness in relevant legal proceedings. Reviewers should be expected to declare if they have held grants, co-authored papers, or worked in the same institution with the authors of the study they are reviewing.

Moreover, journal editors should be explicit in acknowledging their biases. If breastfeeding journals won’t accept papers that question the benefits of breastfeeding or papers that reveal risks of breastfeeding, they should publicly state that fact.

Policy:

Journals … they can develop clear and explicit policies that outline definitions of non-financial conflicts of interests and expectations for author, reviewer, and editorial behavior… Our policy states that no decision on papers submitted to PLoS journals will be made until the competing interests—financial, personal, and professional—of all authors are declared, and that we will publish all relevant positive and negative statements of competing interests. Reviewers are required to declare any interests that might interfere with their objective assessment of a manuscript, and these are considered by the editors in determining the suitability of the reviewer.

Research:

…The development and implementation of explicit policies on non-financial competing interests will clearly benefit from being based upon strong evidence of the extent, nature, and impact of private interests.

…Any assumption that non-financial competing interests are less common or influential than financial incentives is probably misguided.

The key point about non-financial conflicts of interest in breastfeeding research is this: Unless and until researchers, editors and reviewers acknowledge (to themselves and especially to the public) that their income, careers and even self-esteem may depend on confirming their personal belief that breastfeeding has major benefits, all research by breastfeeding professionals will be suspect.

Dr. Amy’s feminist mothering affirmations

cropped view of woman pointing at pink feminist t-shirt, isolated on grey

Natural mothering advocates employ affirmations as a form of magical thinking. They appear to believe that if they just wish hard enough, they can affect the likelihood of the unmedicated vaginal birth that they are supposed to want or the success of the breastfeeding relationship they’re supposed to desire.

That’s nonsense, of course. But such affirmations are also anti-feminist. They are anti-feminist because they assume that a woman’s worth resides in her vagina and breasts, because they ignore women’s needs and desires, and because they arise from philosophies that seek to immure women back into the home.

[perfectpullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]A mother’s worth does not reside in her vagina or breasts. [/perfectpullquote]

My feminist mothering affirmations rest on the opposite premises:

  • A woman’s virtue resides in her mind, talents and character. Whether or not a baby transits her vagina is no more important than whether or not she wears glasses.
  • Women’s needs — for pain relief in labor, for control of whether their breasts are used to feed their babies, for participation in the world beyond mothering — are more important than any purported benefits from natural childbirth, breastfeeding or attachment parenting. Whether or not a woman chooses to adhere to these philosophies is her decision, based on what she thinks is best for her children, not what other people, ignoring scientific evidence, think is best for her children.
  • Women — and society — benefit when they are encouraged to use the full range of their talents in the wider world, and women — and society — are harmed when women are immured in the home, forced to restrict themselves to childcare.

Here are my top ten feminist mothering affirmations:

1. It makes no difference how my baby is born.

Over the course of your son or daughter’s childhood, you will have many occasions to ponder how your actions impact your child’s life and you will second guess yourself many times, wondering if you had handled a specific situation differently might your child have been happier or more successful. Whether your baby was born vaginally or by C-section should never be one of them. It will make absolutely, no difference to your child how he or she emerged from your womb (or, in the case of an adopted child, even if he or she emerged from your womb). There is no reason for you to worry or obsess about how your baby is born.

2. There is no reason for me to suffer.

Some lucky women have a manageable amount of pain in labor and don’t need any relief. Most, however, have an unmanageable amount of pain and desperately seek relief. There is NO REASON to forgo pain relief when you are in pain. It is not safer, healthier or better in any way for your baby or for you to withstand hours of excruciating pain.

3. I am not in competition with other women.

Admittedly this is hard to believe when your friends, acquaintances and casual strangers demand details of your birth so they can compare their “performance” to your “performance,” but it’s true. It’s nobody’s business how you choose to give birth to your child and they don’t deserve to comment upon or even to know those private details.

Childbirth is not a performance that ought to be rated or compared. Childbirth is a bodily function like vision. Sometimes it works well; sometimes it needs help. No one judges women who wear glasses or contacts for nearsightedness even though their eyes don’t work “as nature intended.” Nearsightedness just happens, is no one’s fault and implies nothing about the overall health or quality of a woman’s body. Similarly, childbirth complications just happen, are no one’s fault and imply nothing about the overall health or quality of a woman’s body.

4. I am not guaranteed a healthy baby, so I need to consult with the professionals who can help me ensure my baby’s health.

Human reproduction, like all reproduction, has a high degree of “wastage,” which is another way of saying that death is a common complication of pregnancy. For example, 1 in 5 established pregnancies will end in miscarriage. No amount of wishing and hoping will change that. Similarly, in nature, nearly 10% of pregnancies will end in the death of the baby, the mother or both. Fortunately, the interventions of modern obstetrics can prevent the vast majority of those deaths, but only if you avail yourself of those interventions and the expertise of the people trained to use them.

5. I will not trust birth, because birth is not trustworthy.

Trusting birth makes about as much sense as trusting vision. No amount of trusting will prevent nearsightedness, so refusing eye exams in favor of trusting vision is stupid in the extreme. That goes double for childbirth, which is far more deadly than nearsightedness.

6. I will carefully analyze the motives of those who declare that any particular way of giving birth is “better” than any other.

When you take the time to analyze the advice and recommendations of “birth workers” like midwives, doulas and childbirth educators, ask yourself if they profit when you follow their advice. That does not mean that their advice is necessarily wrong, but it can and too often does compromise their recommendations. Instead of recommending what is good for you and your baby, they may be recommending what is good for their wallet.

Similarly, you should analyze the advice and recommendations of friends and acquaintance looking at how they benefit if you do what they suggest. Are they anxious for you to validate their birth choices by making the same choices? If so, feel free to ignore them.

7. I will not take pregnancy advice or care from anyone who won’t take responsibility for that advice or care.

If a homebirth midwife doesn’t carry insurance, and makes you sign a document declaring that the responsibility for any and all outcomes in yours, she is signaling that even she doesn’t believe that she is educated enough or trained enough to take responsibility your baby’s life or for your life. Real professionals take legal and ethical responsibility for their work; amateurs and hobbyists never do.

8.My baby does not care whether he or she is breastfed or bottlefed.

It makes literally no difference to the baby how he or she gets fed, only that he or she gets fed. Yes, breastfeeding does have some advantages, but those advantages are small and in industrialized countries those benefits are trivial.

9. Both the baby’s needs and my needs matter when it comes to infant feeding.

Yes, breastfeeding can be difficult and stressful in the first few days and weeks, and it is great to persevere through those difficulties if breastfeeding is important to you. But the baby’s hunger and suffering count for a lot, and if you feel your baby is suffering from hunger, you should feel free to feed the baby formula. Your pain and suffering count, too. If your nipples are raw and bleeding, if you have horrible pain when nursing, if you start crying every time the baby cries with hunger, dreading nursing, it is perfectly healthy and acceptable to use formula instead, either for supplementing or exclusively.

10. I will not judge my mothering by the performance of my body.

You mother with your entire body. Your arms hold and embrace your children. Your hands guide. Your lips kiss. Your brain plans and worries, and your metaphorical heart loves your child. Your uterus, vagina and breasts are trivial when compared to the other body parts, so it makes no sense to judge your mothering by whether you had a vaginal birth or breastfed your children.

Mothering is hard. I know; I have four children and I have spent countless hours caring and worrying, wishing I could carry their burdens, smooth their paths, and absorb their hurts. My children are adults now, and no doubt there are many things that they think I could have done better, but they never, ever give any thought to their route of delivery or to whether or for how long they were breastfed.

Don’t judge yourself on these issues, and don’t let anyone judge you. It isn’t simply doesn’t matter … and it’s anti-feminist.

Does breastfeeding increase IQ or do breastfeeding complications decrease it?

Glass 3d buttons. Up and down

There’s a new paper on breastfeeding and IQ.

Is breast feeding associated with offspring IQ at age 5? Findings from prospective cohort: Lifestyle During Pregnancy Study yielded surprising results:

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]We need to know not merely how long women breastfeed, but why they stop.[/pullquote]

In multivariable linear regression analyses adjusted for potential confounders breast feeding was associated with child IQ at 5 years (categorical χ2 test for overall association p=0.03). Compared with children who were breast fed ≤1 month, children breast fed for 2–3, 4–6, 7–9 and 10 or more months had 3.06 (95% CI 0.39 to 5.72), 2.03 (95% CI −0.38 to 4.44), 3.53 (95% CI 1.18 to 5.87) and 3.28 (95% CI 0.88 to 5.67) points higher IQ after adjustment for core confounders, respectively. There was no dose–response relation and further analyses indicated that the main difference in IQ was between breast feeding ≤1 month versus >1 month.

Here are the results of verbal IQ:

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And performance IQ:

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The authors concluded:

Breastfeeding duration of 1 month or shorter compared with longer periods was associated with approximately three points lower IQ, but there was no evidence of a dose–response relation in this prospective birth cohort, where we were able to adjust for some of the most critical confounders, including maternal intelligence.

That makes little sense on its face. If breastfeeding truly improves IQ, one would expect a dose response relationship with longer periods of breastfeeding leading to higher IQ. Moreover, one would expect little to no impact from very short periods of breastfeeding.

The authors chose to put a positive spin on a paradoxical result:

Our finding of a three point difference in IQ associated with any duration of breast feeding longer than 1 month is in support of current recommendations, and is even a relaxed message to mothers who struggle with exclusive breast feeding.

But that’s not the only conclusion you could draw. The same data could be used to argue that the babies who breastfed for less than a month were harmed by adverse effects of breastfeeding itself. Instead of increasing IQ, breastfeeding had no impact and breastfeeding complications actually decreased IQ. It’s not a possibility that the authors ever considered since nearly all breastfeeding research starts with the unfounded assumptions that breastfeeding must have benefits and couldn’t have harmful effects.

The study itself has some very real strengths but also some serious weaknesses.

It’s chief weakness is that it reflects secondary findings from a study designed to assess the impact of maternal alcohol intake.

The LPDS (Lifestyle During Pregnancy Study) consists of 3478 mother–child dyads selected from the DNBC with oversampling of pregnant women with moderate weekly alcohol intake, alcohol binge drinkers and women with high versus low fish intake, iron intake and duration of breast feeding, respectively.

Secondary findings are often the result of outcome switching, an issue with serious ramifications for the integrity and reproducibility of the research.

As John Ioannidis and colleagues explain:

Outcome switching refers to the possibility of changing the outcomes of interest in the study depending on the observed results. A researcher may include ten variables that could be considered outcomes of the research, and — once the results are known — intentionally or unintentionally select the subset of outcomes that show statistically significant results as the outcomes of interest. The consequence is an increase in the likelihood that reported results are spurious by leveraging chance, while negative evidence gets ignored. This is one of several related research practices that can inflate spurious findings when analysis decisions are made with knowledge of the observed data, such as selection of models, exclusion rules and covariates. Such data-contingent analysis decisions constitute what has become known as P-hacking …

There’s also the possibility that the variable that was originally studied (in this case alcohol intake) is a confounding factor in any study of the secondary variable (in this case IQ). The authors do acknowledge this problem and attempt to adjust for it.

A major strength of the study is that adjustment for critical confounding variables including, most importantly, maternal IQ. Most studies on breastfeeding and child IQ have failed to take maternal IQ into account, which renders their findings highly suspect.

Only 6 out of 1385 women in the study (0.4%) chose not to attempt breastfeeding.

In our study sample, we categorised the shortest duration as ≤1 month, since very few women reported breastfeeding duration shorter than this, reflecting that by far the majority of mothers in Denmark choose to breast feed their children.

The authors understand that those who don’t even try differ from other Danish women in important ways:

Adding to the difficulty of obtaining an exposure group with shorter duration of breast feeding is the fact, that women who from the beginning choose not to breast feed may be different from those who do breast feed; for example, women who rely on medication for various reasons may choose not to breast feed because of concerns that medication in the breastmilk may harm the infant…

So far, so good, but the authors fail to consider that those who stop breastfeeding after less than a month may also differ from other Danish woman in a critical way. Their infants may have suffered medical complications from breastfeeding like dehydration or jaundice from insufficient milk supply. It seems never to have occurred to the authors that breastfeeding can have risks as well as benefits. Since up to 15% of first time mothers may have insufficient breastmilk, particularly in the early days of birth, a substantial proportion of babies will likely suffer serious consequences of any effort to promote exclusive breastfeeding.

The data the authors provide suggest that may indeed be the case:

Women who breast fed for less than 1 month compared with 7–9 and more than 10 months were generally younger, they were more likely to be nulliparous (had not previously given birth), have higher BMI, to have been smokers during pregnancy or to have their children be exposed to tobacco smoke postnatally, and have lower IQ…

Nulliparity and higher BMI are both risk factors for insufficient breastmilk.

More notable was this:

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Both maternal IQ and education were linearly associated with breastfeeding duration EXCEPT for duration less than a month. As the chart above shows, Maternal IQ and education were lowest for those who breastfed 2-3 months, whereas IQ and education for those who breastfed for less than a month were equal to the mean for the group. That’s just what you would expect if breastfeeding for less than a month were not a choice but a necessity due to medical factors.

The authors believe they found this:

We found no clear dose response relation of breastfeeding duration with child cognitive development in our data; rather, our results point to a difference in IQ of approximately three points between children who are breast fed for a short period of 1 month or less compared with those who are breast fed longer.

But they may have found the opposite: breastfeeding has no impact on IQ, but breastfeeding complications lead to a decrease in IQ.

There’s one way to find out. We need to know not merely how long women breastfeed, but why they stop. The IQ of children whose mothers chose not to breastfeed for personal — not medical — reasons may be no different than the IQ of children who were breastfed for more than 1 month. That would upend everything we believe we know about the benefits of breastfeeding.

Homebirth midwife Lisa Barrett found not guilty, but hardly exonerated.

not guilty grunge stamp

Deregistered Australian midwife Lisa Barrett was found not guilty in two homebirth deaths.

A former South Australian midwife charged over the deaths of two babies during home births has been found not guilty of two counts of manslaughter.

In the first case of its kind in Australia, Lisa Barrett, 52, pleaded not guilty over the deaths of Tully Kavanagh in 2011 and another baby boy in 2012, who cannot be identified.

In the Supreme Court on Tuesday Justice Ann Vanstone cleared her on both counts…

“Although I find that the accused’s conduct was less than competent, I am not satisfied that her conduct merits criminal sanction.

“My verdict in relation to each count is not guilty.”

I have written about Barrett repeatedly over the past decade. Her involvement in multiple homebirth deaths nearly defies belief.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Who’s responsible when a baby dies at homebirth, mother or midwife?[/pullquote]

Tate Spencer-Koch, Jahli Jean Hobbs, Sam, Tully Kavanaugh and Ian died because Lisa Barrett minimized the risks of homebirth when counseling their mothers, all of whom were at high risk for complications. Of these deaths, 1 was a shoulder dystocia, 2 were second twins, and 2 were breech babies. They died because Lisa Barrett could not handle the complications that were predicted. They died because their mothers did not have the Cesareans that would have saved the babies lives.

The practice of homebirth is notable for its recklessness, but even so Lisa Barrett was in a class by herself. During the Coroner’s inquest into the deaths of Tate and Jahli Jean, Barrett was caught live tweeting the proceedings and offering scathing comments about the prosecution’s case. If that weren’t contemptuous enough, Barrett also managed to find the time to attend Tully’s homebirth death. As a result, the Coroner’s inquest was expanded to include both Tully’s death and Sam’s death.

The report, released in 2012 was scathing in its assessment of Barrett’s conduct. So why wasn’t she found guilty of criminal charges?

I don’t yet have access to the full decision, but I suspect it might have something to do with the argument made by her defense counsel:

In closing submissions, Scott Henchliffe, for Barrett, said there “was no law that made anything that Barrett did, that we have heard about in this case, illegal”.

He said the two mother’s whose babies died had “self-serving memories” of their pregnancies and births and held Barrett responsible for the outcomes.

“The decision to homebirth was their own and in the most general sense it was that decision which, when the risks eventuated, led to both them losing their babies,” he said.

“It’s only human nature for them to seek to put themselves in the light where they carry less guilt or blame or responsibility for what ultimately occurred.”

In other words, these mothers knew the risks, took the gamble and lost.

There’s considerable evidence to support that defense in the case of Tully Kavanaugh. During the inquest into his death:

Expectant mother Sarah Kerr told an obstetrician she was willing to risk the death of one of her twins by having a home birth, a court has heard…

Dr Raman told Deputy State Coroner Anthony Schapel that Ms Kerr, seemed to have “made up her mind” about having a home delivery. That was despite knowing the increased risk of giving birth to twins at home.

“She said she understood either twin could die and she wanted to accept that risk,” Dr Raman said.

And if that weren’t damning enough:

Dr Raman said she asked Ms Kerr about her ante-natal care and who her treating midwife and general practitioner was.

She said Ms Kerr replied that birthing advocate and former midwife Lisa Barrett had been advising her with her pregnancy, but that she didn’t support the couple’s decision to have a home birth.

“She said her midwife didn’t support her twin delivery at home and she wasn’t in favour of it,” Dr Raman said.

Furthermore, Kerr testified at the inquest in defense of Lisa Barrett. Noting that she had attended an earlier hearing about Barrett’s involvement in other homebirth deaths:

In the Coroner’s Court yesterday, Ms Kerr said she was not discouraged from a home delivery despite in August hearing of the adverse outcomes of home births. Ms Kerr told Deputy State Coroner Anthony Schapel she took full responsibility for her actions and was aware of the increased risk of the delivery of twins.

“No one can say I didn’t make an informed choice, I sat through every day of evidence,” she said.

It was only later that Kerr decided she had been misled.

So Lisa Barrett was hardly exonerated and she has paid a high price — legally and financially — for her recklessness. But, at least in Australia, it appears that mothers who choose homebirth in defiance of medical advice bear greater responsibility for the outcome than the midwife who agreed to help them.

Rafael Perez-Escamilla, PhD and colleagues owe women a profound apology for misogyny

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Prof. Rafael Perez-Escamilla and his colleagues at the Yale School of Public Health have joined the cadre of medical misogynists by adding breastfeeding to a long list of medical issues where women’s self reports and suffering are dismissed out of hand.

Even I, a deeply cynical person, am stunned by the viciousness of their claim.

Some have hypothesized that SRIM (self-reported insufficient milk) is simply a socially accepted excuse that women give for explaining why they are not practicing what they know is recommended infant-feeding behavior.

Apparently, those lazy, selfish new mothers are faking it so they can get out of breastfeeding.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Every misogynist healthcare provider “knows” that women lie about their symptoms and suffering.[/pullquote]

It’s just like those “neurotic” women who self-report chest pain and are sent home from the ER having been told they are suffering from anxiety, when in truth they are in the midst of a heart attack.

Or just like those lazy women who complain of disabling menstrual pain just to get out of school or work, but in truth have severe endometriosis and are literally bleeding into their abdominal cavity every month.

Every misogynist healthcare provider “knows” that women lie about their symptoms and suffering. Don’t bother listening to them; they’re just making excuses.

However, others have postulated that SRIM may result from not understanding the lactation process, as women often report SRIM within the first 2 d after birth, a time when only small amounts of colostrum are being produced, and they introduce breast-milk substitutes in response to this (i.e., pre-lacteal feeding)… The precise proportion of women who cannot produce enough milk for satiating and meeting the nutritional needs of their infants for primary biological reasons remains unknown. However, it is likely that this proportion is low because the lactation process is mainly driven by a highly protected infant demand-maternal supply process.

Perez-Escamilla et al. seem to be afflicted with a lack of knowledge about both evolution and basic biology. First, evolution does not produce perfection. Second there are lots of critical bodily functions that are driven by highly protected demand-supply processes …. and those processes fail. These conditions include everything from irregular periods to type I diabetes. Are women with irregular periods making excuses? Are women with type I diabetes too lazy to metabolize sugar?

Here’s a radical thought: instead of postulating about whether women can be believed, let’s investigate.

Insufficient breastmilk is common, not rare.

In 2010, the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine acknowledged:

It is important to recognize that not all breastfed infants will receive optimal milk intake during the first few days of life; as many as 10–18% of exclusively breastfed U.S. newborns lose more than 10% of birth weight.

There is a biomarker for insufficient breastmilk.

From a 2001 paper:

High levels of sodium in breast milk are closely associated with lactation failure. One study showed that those who failed lactation had higher initial breast milk sodium concentrations, and the longer they stayed elevated, the lower the success rate.

Insufficient breastmilk is NOT a figment of women’s imagination.

This was confirmed in a 2017 paper that also showed that women who felt they had insufficient breastmilk were more likely to have the biomarker present.

…[E]levated day 7 breast milk Na:K occurred in 42% of mothers with a day 7 milk supply concern, compared with 21% of mothers without a day 7 milk supply concern (unadjusted relative risk, 2.0; P = .008) (Table II). The unadjusted odds of elevated Na:K were 2.7 greater (95% CI, 1.3-5.9) with maternal report of milk supply concern (refer- ence = no concern, P = .01) and further increased after ad- justment for maternal ethnicity (3.4; 95% CI, 1.5-7.9; P = .003).

The potential brain threatening and life threatening consequences include kernicterus, hypernatremic dehydration and severe hypoglycemia.

Kernicterus, thought to have nearly disappeared, is making a comeback.

Dr. Lawrence Gartner revealed to other lactation professionals in a 2013 lecture, 90% of cases of kernicterus (jaundice induced brain damage) are caused by insufficient breastmilk.

The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine reported in a 2017 paper:

In the U.S. Kernicterus Registry, a database of 125 cases of kernicterus in infants discharged as healthy newborns, 98% of these infants were fully or partially breastfed …

Neonatal hypernatremic dehydration is more common than SIDS.

From 2016 paper :

In a retrospective study in the United Kingdom, the frequency of breastfeeding-associated neonatal hypernatremia was found to be greater than all-causes combined of hypernatremia among late preterm and term newborns.81 In the mentioned report, the incidence of sodium level ≥ 160 was 71 per 100 000 breastfed infants (1 in 1400).

The consequences include death and potentially devastating neurologic injury as this 2017 study explains:

In our study 7 out of 65 patients died as a result of complications of hypernatremia. There was a significant correlation between severity of hypernatremia and mortality (p = 0.001). All who died had serum sodium concentration >160 mmol/L…

All infants in the control group were developmentally normal at ages 6 and 12 months, but in the case group 25% and 21% had developmental delay at 6 and 12 months, respectively. At 18 months the incidence of developmental delay was 3% for the control group and 19% for case group, and at 24 months 12% of case infants had developmental delay versus none for the control group…

Hypoglycemia also injures and kills babies.

A 2017 paper reports that the UK has paid out $250 million dollars for brain injuries due to hypoglycemia, nearly all cases the result of insufficient breastmilk.

As far as I can determine Perez-Escamilla and colleagues simply IGNORED all of this research. Indeed the words “dehydration” and “jaundice,” together accounting for literally tens of thousands of newborn hospital readmissions each year, aren’t even MENTIONED in the paper.

This is not the first time that Perez-Escamilla has let his enthusiasm for promoting breastfeeding exceed his ethical obligation to tell the truth. Last fall he was forced to retract a libelous tweet about the Fed Is Best Foundation supposedly receiving industry funding. As far as I can determine, he had no evidence; he just made up the claim to suit his personal views.

Having staked entire careers (and possibly self-esteem) on the beliefs that breastfeeding has major benefits and every woman can breastfeed, Perez-Escamilla and colleagues cannot bear the cognitive dissonance of admitting that the scientific evidence shows the opposite and so they ignore that evidence.

That would be bad enough. What is truly reprehensible is that they substitute classic misogyny in its place: it’s okay to ignore women because they can’t be trusted to accurately report their own symptoms.

Perez-Escamilla and colleagues have let their prejudices and conflicts of interest blind them to the suffering of women and babies. They owe all women an apology.

Questioning the benefits of breastfeeding is nothing like questioning the benefits of vaccination. Here’s why.

Question Mark Speech Bubble

Last week March for Science censored scientific information in an effort to squelch discussion that questioned the benefits of breastfeeding. It was a startling tactic for an organization that claims to promote science.

Referring to Sci Moms, a group that dared to suggest that breastfeeding promotion has risks as well as benefits, the administrators of March for Science Facebook page accused them of:

… a history of denying the well-established science on infant nutrition and criticizing health promotion initiatives of the World Health Organization and other health orgs.

…[W]e want to encourage everyone to treat the SciMoms with some healthy skepticism and remind everyone that there are more reliable resources out there on infant nutrition, such as the World Health Organization, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine…

This week, Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, the chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Section on Breastfeeding was quoted in The New Yorker. Dismissing the data of economist Emily Oster, author of the best selling parenting book CribSheet — data that also questions the benefits of breastfeeding — Feldman -Winter had this to say:

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Doctors who won’t change their recommendations about breastfeeding in light of new evidence risk harming their patients.[/pullquote]

That’s the really scary part of having a person like Oster, who is not an epidemiologist, distilling this information to the lay public. It’s basically as bad as the anti-vaxxers.

But questioning the benefits of breastfeeding is nothing like questioning the benefits of vaccination. Here’s why: We have copious data on the benefits of vaccination; nearly every prediction made by doctors and scientists about the impact of vaccination has come true. In contrast, though we have nearly two generations worth of data on breastfeeding promotion, almost none of the predictions made by doctors and scientists on its impact have come true.

Over the past generation, breastfeeding organizations, lactation consultants, and advocates of natural mothering assured us that if we increased breastfeeding rates, we would reap the benefits of lower incidence of conditions from allergy to obesity, lower rates of infant hospital readmission and even lower infant death rates. The US invested millions in public health campaigns promoting breastfeeding and the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative’s “Ten Steps” became integral in many hospitals, accompanied by the hiring of thousands of lactation consultants in hospitals and doctors’ offices.

In the US, the rate of breastfeeding initiation increased from a nadir of 22% in 1972 to over 80% in 2015. In that time, rates of conditions from allergy to obesity have not fallen; indeed, they’ve risen. Hospital admission rates have increased, and there has been no observable effect on infant mortality.

Perhaps more shocking, because it was unanticipated, promoting exclusive breastfeeding has caused serious health problems. It turns out that breastfeeding, like all natural processes, has a failure rate; up to 15% of first time mothers will have difficulty producing enough milk to fully nourish a baby, especially in the early days. There has been a dramatic increase in neonatal dehydration, severe jaundice and related complications. Indeed, exclusive breastfeeding has become the leading risk factor for newborn hospital readmission.

Doctors are trained to expect that half of what we are taught at the beginning of our careers will ultimately shown to be wrong within the next five years; unfortunately, no one knows which half. We read scientific journals each month to learn not only about new discoveries, but new data that overturn old discoveries. The key to providing excellent care to our patients rests on our flexibility to change if the scientific evidence changes. Doctors who can’t or won’t change their recommendations based on new evidence do their patients a terrible disservice and possibly cause them harm.

The March for Science justified its efforts to prevent debate by referring to the recommendations of the World Health Organization, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine. Anyone with grounding in science will recognize this as the logical fallacy known as the argument from authority:

Insisting that a claim is true simply because a valid authority or expert on the issue said it was true, without any other supporting evidence offered.

It is an especially problematic logical fallacy when discussing new data. For example, I was taught that routine episiotomy in childbirth reduced the risk of vaginal tears. In the 1990’s new data suggested the opposite. It would have been both inappropriate and unprofessional for obstetricians to justify ignoring the new data by claiming that major obstetric textbooks and organizations still recommended episiotomy. It is equally invalid to dismiss new data on the risks and benefits of breastfeeding simply because major textbooks and organizations still strongly recommend breastfeeding.

It seems that Dr. Feldman-Winter of the AAP might have been trying to advance a similar logical fallacy by referencing anti-vaxxers. Anti-vaxxers do indeed disagree with all major health organizations on the safety and efficacy of vaccination. But vaccines aren’t safe and effective because major health organization recommend them; they are safe and effective because the data show them to be safe and effective, dramatically reducing the burdens of disease and death from vaccine preventable illnesses. The predictions that doctors made about the impact of vaccines did indeed come to pass and serious side effects have been rare.

When a fabricated claim was advanced that vaccines cause autism, it wasn’t dismissed out of hand. It was investigated in large studies involving hundreds of thousands of individuals and demonstrated to be untrue.

New evidence about the benefits and risks of breastfeeding has been published and actual experience — including tens of thousands of hospitalizations each year for insufficient breastmilk — adds urgency to the need to reassess current recommendations. Dismissing new evidence out of hand, attempting to silence discussion of that evidence, and demeaning anyone who dares question the conventional wisdom in light of the new evidence isn’t science; it’s defensiveness.

We face a crisis; tens of thousands of newborns are suffering preventable complications each year because their mothers have been convinced that breastfeeding will provide benefits that have failed to materialize. We need immediate action from pediatricians and lactation professionals to prevent ongoing harm. Instead we are getting disparagement of those who use new data to question old certainties. Babies and mothers deserve better.

It’s time for a Baby Friendly Vaccine Initiative!

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We are in the midst of a dramatic resurgence of vaccine preventable diseases sickening hundreds of children at the cost of millions of dollars. It’s time to take a page from the lactivist playbook and start a Baby Friendly Vaccine Initiative.

The central premise of breastfeeding promotion effort is that no mother would refuse to breastfeed if she only understood the benefits and got the proper support. Adapting to vaccine refusal means no mother would refuse to vaccinate if she only understood the benefits and got the proper support.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Those who vaccinate are better mothers than those who don’t.[/pullquote]

Considering that vaccines save millions more lives in practice than breastfeeding ever could, increasing vaccination rates should take priority over increasing breastfeeding rates. That’s why I propose an immediate overhaul of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative to promote vaccination instead of breastfeeding.

The Ten Steps to Successful Vaccination are:

  1. Have a written vaccination policy that is routinely communicated to all health care staff.
  2. Train all health care staff in the skills necessary to implement this policy.
  3. Inform all pregnant women about the benefits of vaccination.
  4. Insist that every mother sign a vaccine contract that emphasizes that anything other than full vaccination on the CDC schedule threatens baby’s health.
  5. Mandate frequent visits by a vaccination consultant to provide constant support for vaccination.
  6. Help mothers initiate all recommended injections within one hour of birth.
  7. Show mothers how to obtain vaccinations even if they are separated from their infants.
  8. Accept no refusal to vaccinate unless medically indicated.
  9. Encourage vaccination on demand by the pediatrician.
  10. Foster the establishment of vaccination support groups and refer mothers to them on discharge from the hospital or birth center.

Wait, what? Some mothers think there are legitimate reasons not to vaccinate their babies? There are no legitimate reasons; it’s just a sign that they haven’t received enough vaccination support from hospital personnel, their peers and society at large.

Wait, what? Some mothers think that vaccination harms their infants? Who cares what they think? Public health officials have spoken on the issue of vaccination and mother’s observations of their own infants are irrelevant.

Wait, what? Some mothers think this is an issue of personal freedom? It most certainly is not. Vaccinating a child does not simply protect that child, but it provides a measurable benefit to society.

Lack of peer support for vaccination is a serious problem in and of itself. There are webpages and Facebook groups that encourage parents not to vaccinate or to diverge from the CDC schedule. Such webpages and Facebook groups must be ruthlessly suppressed along with public shaming of anyone who doesn’t support routine childhood vaccination.

Let’s face it: those who vaccinate according to the CDC schedule love their children more than those who do not. Only a lazy, selfish mother would listen to anti-vaccine quacks instead of the CDC.

I even have a motto for the new Baby Friendly Vaccine Initiative:

Breastfed Is Good,
Fed Is Better, but
Vaccinated is BEST!

Why waste time promoting breastfeeding when we could be promoting vaccination and saving far more lives?

Ten questions I’d like to ask Kathleen Kendall-Tackett, PhD, IBCLC

Number ten wooden material on table with copy space

Breastfeeding professional Kathleen Kendall-Tackett PhD, IBCLC wrote an editorial for the latest issue of Clinical Lactation entitled Concerns About the 10 Steps.

She’s attempting to respond to growing criticism of breastfeeding promotion initiatives by the Fed Is Best Foundation. The second paragraph sounds quite reasonable.

While I frequently do not agree with Fed Is Best’s recommendations or approach, I feel that it’s important to hear what they are saying. Mothers do fall through the cracks, and tragically some mothers and babies have been harmed. In response to these stories, we have two options. We can ignore them and keep doing what we are doing. Or we can view this as an opportunity to continue to improve our models of care.

Unfortunately it was preceded by the first paragraph, which makes accusations about the Foundation.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Will breastfeeding professionals answer these questions if mothers ask them?[/pullquote]

For the past several weeks, I’ve been working on a talk about what we can learn from Fed Is Best. I spent days going through their Website and reading the stories they have posted—a pretty tough assignment. Some of the breastfeeding information on their site is completely wrong — or wrong enough. And the mothers’ stories are heartbreaking. This organization has been a vocal and divisive presence on social media, and they have garnered international attention to their cause.

It’s difficult to be more vague and unsubstantiated than “wrong – or wrong enough.”

I know better than to believe that Kendall-Tackett would agree to engage publicly with me, but I’ve decided to imagine what I would ask her if she agreed. I would not press her to detail her concerns, but rather I’d pose a series of yes or no questions to clarify her position. Since the Fed Is Best Foundation bases its recommendations on the scientific evidence, I’d question her about that.

1. Is the claim that exclusive breastfeeding is now the leading risk factor for newborn readmission wrong? Yes or no?

2. Does the scientific evidence show that the risk of a breastfed baby being readmitted to the hospital is 1 in 71? Yes or no?

3. Has there been a recent surge in cases of hypernatremic neonatal dehydration sometimes correctable, but sometimes leading to seizures, permanent brain injury or death? Yes or no?

4. Are approximately 90% of cases of kernicterus (severe jaundice) the result of insufficient breastmilk intake? Yes or no?

5. In the wake mandated of hours of skin to skin and mandated rooming in has there been a rise in the incidence of newborns smothering in and falling from maternal hospital beds? Yes or no?

6. Breastfeeding professionals promised that an increase in breastfeeding rates would lead to decreased incidence of conditions like allergy and childhood obesity. Isn’t it true that while rates of breastfeeding initiation have shot up from 22% in 1972 to over 80% in 2015, incidence of those conditions has continued to rise? Yes or no?

7. Breastfeeding professionals predicted that breastfeeding would reduce infant hospitalizations. That didn’t happen, did it? Yes or no?

8. Breastfeeding professionals insisted that increasing breastfeeding would save infant lives. With the exception of a decreased incidence of necrotizing enterocolitis in premature babies, that has not happen either, has it? Yes or no?

9. Isn’t it true that infant stomach capacity is not 5-7 cc as claimed by lactation professionals with reference to a paper published in 1921, but actually much higher, 20 cc or more as demonstrated by more recent scientific evidence? Yes or no?

10. Isn’t it the case that nearly all the benefits for breastfeeding claimed by lactation professionals have been debunked by newer, more comprehensive research that corrects for confounding variables like maternal education and socioeconomic status? Yes or no?

These are not hard questions to answer. Hopefully breastfeeding professionals like Kathleen Kendall-Tackett will answer them — perhaps if mothers ask her.

March for Science squanders its credibility by promoting lactivist ideology instead of evidence

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What’s the most important tool of any science denialist? It’s the delete button, of course!

From anti-vaxxers to homebirth advocates, from creationists to climate deniers, advocates of pseudoscience sharply distinguish themselves from advocates of science by aggressively deleting any comments that question received wisdom and banning those who persist in inserting actual scientific evidence into a discussion. Deleting and banning is the quickest way to squander scientific credibility.

[pullquote align=”right” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]The hill they chose to die on? Breastfeeding.[/pullquote]

Therefore, I was surprised to see March for Science squander its hard earned credibility to promote an ideology ahead of scientific evidence. The hill they chose to die on? Breastfeeding.

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We have had some come to us about this post promoting an organization (Sci Moms) with a history of denying the well-established science on infant nutrition and criticizing health promotion initiatives of the World Health Organization and other health orgs.

We don’t dispute the science of this particular post, so we’re going to leave it up, but we want to encourage everyone to treat the SciMoms with some healthy skepticism and remind everyone that there are more reliable resources out there on infant nutrition, such as the World Health Organization, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine…

Someone came to them?
Denying the well-established science?
Criticizing health promotion initiatives?

Orwell couldn’t have done a better job.

This isn’t a science; it’s the logical fallacy “argument from authority.” But the worst part is the deleting and banning of anyone who tried to reason with the folks at March for Science.

Let’s take a look at what the LATEST scientific evidence about breastfeeding shows.

The most recent, most comprehensive review of the entire breastfeeding literature is Greenville, N. C. “Is the” breast is best” mantra an oversimplification?.” THE JOURNAL OF FAMILY PRACTICE 67.6 (2018). Here’s what the authors found:

The evidence for infant breastfeeding status and its association with health outcomes faces significant limitations; the great majority of those limitations tend to overestimate the benefits of breastfeeding. Nearly all evidence is based on observational studies, in which causality cannot be determined and self-selection bias, recall bias, and residual confounding limit the value or strength of the findings.

Moreover, breastfeeding has risks as well as benefits:

…[E]xclusive breastfeeding at discharge from the hospital is likely the single greatest risk factor for hospital readmission in newborns. Term infants who are exclusively breastfed are more likely to be hospitalized compared to formula-fed or mixed-fed infants, due to hyperbilirubinemia, dehydration, hyper- natremia, and weight loss (number needed to harm (NNH)=71). For weight loss >10% of birth weight with or without hospitalization, the NNH for breastfed infants is 13.

That translates to tens of thousands of preventable hospital readmissions each year.

According to Sarin, Arjun, Andrew Thill, and Clay W. Yaklin. “Neonatal Hypernatremic Dehydration.” Pediatric annals 48.5 (2019): e197-e200:

Dehydration/excessive weight loss is defined as a loss of more than 10% of birth weight prior to the end of the first week of life, and is thought to occur in up to 15% of exclusively breast-fed infants.

And the consequences are devastating:

Serum sodium level greater than 160 mEq/L is a risk factor for morbidity and mortality. The most commonly cited complications include seizures, bradycardia, vascular thrombosis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, renal failure, intracranial hemorrhage, pontine myelinosis, cerebral edema, and death. Seizure is the most common complication and usually occurs during correction of the hypernatremia, as do the other common complications.

Aggressive, unreflective breastfeeding promotion (like the breastfeeding promotion by the March for Science) has been responsible, particularly the poorly named Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative:

Flaherman, Valerie, and Isabelle Von Kohorn. “Interventions intended to support breastfeeding: Updated assessment of benefits and harms.” Jama 316.16 (2016): 1685-1687.

The BFHI bans pacifiers in contradiction to the scientific evidence.

Counseling to avoid the use of pacifiers in the newborn period is an intervention commonly used to support breastfeeding. However, evidence has been building that infant use of a pacifier may be associated with a reduced risk of sudden infant death syndrome,7 the most common cause of postneonatal death in the United States. The evidence review showed that avoiding pacifiers was not associated with any breastfeeding outcomes assessed in the evidence review. A recent Cochrane systematic review reached the same conclusion. Thus, routine counseling to avoid pacifiers may very well be ethically problematic.

The BFHI bans formula supplementation in contradiction to the scientific evidence.

Counseling mothers to avoid giving infants any food or drink other than breast milk during the newborn period is step 6 of the BFHI and one of the primary care interventions most commonly used to support breastfeeding. Three randomized trials have specifically examined the effectiveness of counseling to avoid giving newborns any food or drink other than breast milk; none showed a beneficial effect of such counseling on breastfeeding duration.

Aggressive breastfeeding promotion HARMS babies:

Other harms were noted in the 2016 paper Unintended Consequences of Current Breastfeeding Initiatives:

Enforced prolonged skin to skin contact leads to deaths from Sudden Unexpected Postneonatal Collapse (SUPC).

Reports of SUPC include both severe apparent life-threatening events (recently referred to as brief resolved unexplained events) and sudden unexpected death in infancy occurring within the first postnatal week of life. A comprehensive review of this issue identified 400 case reports in the literature, mostly occurring during skin-to-skin care, with one-third of the events occurring in the first 2 hours after birth …

Infant injuries and deaths as a result of enforced 24 hours rooming in and closing well baby nurseries.

An overly rigid insistence on these steps in order to comply with Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative criteria may inadvertently result in a potentially exhausted or sedated postpartum mother being persuaded to feed her infant while she is in bed overnight … This may result in prone positioning and co-sleeping on a soft warm surface in direct contradiction to the Safe Sleep Recommendations of the National Institutes of Health. In addition, co-sleeping also poses a risk for a newborn falling out of the mother’s bed in the hospital, which can have serious consequences.

So the benefits of breastfeeding have been massively exaggerated and the risks ignored. That’s precisely what feeding safety advocates have been saying for years. It is deeply unfortunate that the March for Science chose to elevate ideology over science, and ideological conformity over scientific debate.

They would do well to keep the following aphorism in mind.

Science:
If you don’t make mistakes, you’re doing it wrong.
If you don’t correct those mistakes, you’re doing it really wrong.
If you can’t accept that you’re mistaken, you’re not doing it at all.

I propose that we add the following line just for March for Science:

If you delete and ban those who question you and hide the evidence that you were mistaken, you have spectacularly destroyed your credibility.