I weaned my little man a couple of months ago, but I know you ladies have all the answers so I have a question for you. Our friends are both average sized adults, but their 10 week old is in the 95% height & weight. They eat no red meat but do eat non-organic chicken almost every day, so are wondering if the hormones in the chicken are getting in the mom's breast-milk and making the baby so big.
Has anyone read/heard anything about this? I know it is definitely recommended that nursing mothers eat organically as much as possible, and I think the hormones do pass into the breastmilk. But do you think the chicken hormones are really affecting the baby so drastically?
Re: chicken - organic or not?
no the baby is growing quickly because that is what babies do. My daughter also stayed in the 95th percentile until she was about 9months old then continued in the 95th for height but moved slowly down the weight percentages (totally normal and expected).
If she wants to switch to organic that could be a choice she makes based on how she eats and what she wants to eat, it is more likely causing her harm than her baby.
here is a link about this:
https://kellymom.com/babyconcerns/growth/weight-toomuch.html
Little Rose is 2 1/2.
I don't have any evidence of this but I am going to say no. I would think the even if the mom was eating non organic chicken, the mother's body would filter out the hormones to protect baby. The mother would get the hormones not the baby. Even if some hormones did leak into the milk, it would be a small percentage and wouldn't effect baby this drastically. This is my theory but like I said, I have no evidence to back it up and I could be wrong.
Some babies just grow faster and bigger while others are smaller and grow slower.
One reason breastfeeding moms are advised to eat organic is because organic food is more nutrient rich. If the mother is eating a nutrient rich diet then the milk for the baby is going to be more nutrient rich.
DD1: allergic to eggs & dairy
c/p 4/1/11
DD2: milk and soy protein intolerant, allergic to eggs, soy, peanuts, tree nuts, sesame, bananas
MSPI Moms Check-In Blog
This. Non-organic chicken does not have hormones.
Was he really huge when he was born? I was told by DS2's doctor (and have read it other places, too) that a baby's size the first 12-18 months is more a reflection of interuterine conditions more than anything else.
But it's never too early to stop eating chickens that have been given hormones, IMO!
DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)
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