There is certainly not enough evidence to advise parents to avoid it.
There most certainly is, let parents decide for themselves selves and do no with hold information, because of a personal bias.
I am in the middle of something now, I will get back with a list of research later
@AngelaLynch no one is with holding information, the paper quoted above is a published research article. The issue is more of empirical evidence, type 1 is obviously an incredibly complicated condition and with a myriad of factors involved and boiling it down to moving from breast feeding to cows milk seems too simplistic, especially considering the research paper itself states that all other environmental factors etc were disregarded in the study and were cautious in their own conclusions. It also does not explain those who develop type 1 in their teens, 20s, 30s etc.
Secondly, of course parent's have every right to decide for themselves in terms of breast feeding their baby or not, but it does not mean that academics/healthcare professionals need to pass on all research done on a topic to them to make a decision. Academics/healthcare professionals are better placed to way up the facts and look at the evidence to make the decision. Research topics like this and notoriously complicated and contradictory and would serve no purpose passing on all the info to parents.
People in their teen and twenties also consume dairy products, and this information is not widely known and should be.
People in their teen and twenties also consume dairy products, and this information is not widely known and should be.
Well, even if cow's milk is a trigger for T1, it's a bit late for us now. I never even realised I had the potential to develop diabetes nor my daughter. Nobody else in my family has it. What's done is done.
My now teenager was feed through a tube at first, I was too ill to even see her in scbu, but when I started to get better I was able to express milk (not a massive amount compared to some of the other mum's) and this was given to her, until I was able to feed her myself full time. Looking at her now, she appears to be a picture of health and I hope it will continue
My sister, who is 13 months younger than me, had exactly the same family meals and plenty of milk too, it was free when we were at school and she doesn't have type, I am one of five children and we were all bottle fed.
And 80s!Hey! Everyone had school milk in the 70s.. I turned out to be the only D "in the village."
Put that together with a "trip" down the stairs, an interest in West end musicals & ballet.. &'you may just have a cause..?!
Hey! Everyone had school milk in the 70s.. I turned out to be the only D "in the village."
Put that together with a "trip" down the stairs, an interest in West end musicals & ballet.. &'you may just have a cause..?!
My now teenager was feed through a tube at first, I was too ill to even see her in scbu, but when I started to get better I was able to express milk (not a massive amount compared to some of the other mum's) and this was given to her, until I was able to feed her myself full time. Looking at her now, she appears to be a picture of health and I hope it will continue
My sister, who is 13 months younger than me, had exactly the same family meals and plenty of milk too, it was free when we were at school and she doesn't have type, I am one of five children and we were all bottle fed.
Hey! Everyone had school milk in the 70s.. I turned out to be the only D "in the village."
Put that together with a "trip" down the stairs, an interest in West end musicals & ballet.. &'you may just have a cause..?!
If got no idea about the second one either... Just suggesting it's more a dodgy "hand of cards" more than just "one thing"..?Exactly, on the highlighted sentence.............. but no idea about the second one lol
If got no idea about the second one either... Just suggesting it's more a dodgy "hand of cards" more than just "one thing"..?
Are there any peer reviewed studies of trips down the stairs
Yes it is, but keep away from milk
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