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Kangaroo mothering is good for kids

rynner2

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'Kangaroo mothering' helps boost a child's health and intelligence, study finds
Henry Bodkin
12 December 2016 • 6:00am

Kangaroo mothering”, the practice of continuous skin-to-skin contact with a newborn baby, results in healthier, more intelligent and successful offspring, a new study reveals.
A 20-year follow-up from a landmark trial found that those nurtured in the kangaroo method scored higher in IQ tests and earned 53 per cent more.
They were also found to be less likely to have behavioural problems such as aggression and display absenteeism than babies in a control group.

Followers of the method nest an infant in a “kangaroo” position on their chest as soon as possible after birth. Both mother and baby are supposed to go home as quickly as safely feasible.

The technique is often used as an alternative to incubation in cases of premature birth, whereby the trained mother or caregiver acts as the child’s incubator and its main source of stimulation and food, in the form of breast feeding.

Between 1993 and 1996 a group of more than 700 prematurely born babies in Columbia were, on the basis of randomized selection, placed either in an incubator or were nurtured using the kangaroo method.
Two decades later, a follow-up survey funded by the Canadian Government, has shown that those who underwent the latter method benefited by comparison.

Published in the journal Paediatrics, the research shows that kangaroo mothering offered significant protection against early death, with the a 3.5 per cent mortality rate compared to a 7.7 per cent rate in the control group.
IQ test also showed a small but significant advantage of 3.5 per cent compared to other infants.

Lead researcher Dr Nathalie Charpak, of the Kangaroo Foundation in Bogota, said the method has “Significant, long-lasting social and behavioural protective effects 20 years after the intervention”.
“We firmly believe that this is a powerful, efficient, scientifically based healthcare intervention that can be used in all settings, from those with very restricted to unrestricted access to healthcare.”

The study also found that, compared with babies in the control group, those nurtured in the kangaroo method went on to develop bigger brains, with significantly larger volumes of grey matter.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...helps-boost-childs-health-intelligence-study/
 
I think the question that arises for me is why on earth anyone thought that imposing a physical separation on the mother-infant dyad as a matter of course was a good idea in the first place :huh: I think you could make an interesting historical study of patriarchal attitudes to motherhood and child-rearing, and the knowledge that has been lost as the result of largely male doctors insisting they understood childbirth better than the almost exclusively female midwives whose purview it once was, never mind the actual mothers, who are taught helplessness. There is a huge and largely hidden physical and psychological toll on mothers as a result of this pathologising of childbirth, which ought to be the cause of a huge outcry.

Instead, outside of organisations such as AIMS, to a certain extent the NCT and to a still lesser extent La Leche League, there is largely silence. To be honest, I would have been none the wiser myself if the birth of my elder child had not gone catastrophically - although entirely avoidably :banghead: :mad: - wrong.
 
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