Saturday, November 29, 2008

Dec 3rd: Blue Sky Christmas Concert/Party/Cookie exchange!

Greetings!

Blue Sky is having a very special early Christmas celebration this year. We are combining our annual Christmas Cookie exchange with a special informal concert.

Date: this Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008
Time: 2:30pm till 4:30pm.
Price 1000 yen per family
Place: Tsurumaki Kumin Shukaijo (same place as Halloween, but without the crowds!)


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Everyone brings along a Tupperware of 15 or more of their favourite cookies for the exchange, and we all swap cookies! Some we will take home, and some we will have to eat right away!

The PTA choir from Matsugaoka Elementary school will perform the songs that won them a place in the Japan national PTA choral festival (Tokyo region). This will be followed by Christmas songs and carols sung by my friend Rebecca Sato, an opera singer and mother of two little boys.

This is not a formal sit-down concert. This is a small baby- and child-friendly event in a local community room, where your little ones are free to roam around, make noise and do whatever they need to do. (There is a small park and playground outside too.) Everyone performing has kids of their own, and some of them will be coming along too.

Optional: bring a small present for your own child (value under 1000 yen) to put under the tree, we will hand them out at the end. (Please wrap and label clearly)

Hope you will join us for some early Christmas fun!
Click here for tickets online.

LLL Founder's speech online

Mary Ann Kerwin, one of the founders of La Leche League, spoke at the LLL Japan conference on 23rd August 2008. You can listen to her speech entitled "Breastfeeding: Love that lasts a lifetime" It's a bilingual presentation.
1hour 18min 10sec (13.7MB)

「母乳育児 ~生涯続く愛情~」
メアリー・アン・カーウィン(ラ・レーチェ・リーグ創設者のひとり)
第2回 ラ・レーチェ・リーグ日本主催 エリア・コンファレンス2008
2008年8月23日 東京 独立行政法人 国立オリンピック記念青少年総合センター 大ホール1時間18分10秒 13.7MB
ここをクリックすると音声を聞くことができます。

Speech is available at:
http://www.llljapan.com/education/podcast/MAKinLLLJapan2stconf.mp3

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Formula For Tragedy

See video at: http://cbs2chicago.com/video/?id=51358@wbbm.dayport.com&cid=48

Nov 13, 2008 9:16 pm US/Central

Investigators: Formula For Tragedy

Powdered Baby Formula Could Be Dangerous For Some Infants

Dave Savini

CHICAGO (CBS) ― A warning for parents: Milk-based powdered formula
could put premature babies at risk.

And it is a possible cause for the death of an infant born at Rush-
Copley Medical Center in Aurora and other babies across the country.

Connor McGray and his twin brother, Logan, were born prematurely on
Nov. 16, 2007, at Rush-Copley.

Connor appeared to be the healthier of the two — until a week later
when their parents, Amanda Carlin and Tim McGray of Somonauk, received
a call from a doctor at the hospital, saying the infant was lethargic
and refusing to eat.

Doctors discovered Connor had meningitis, McGray said, and "they
basically told us, all we could do (was) pray."

The baby died at home on May 3, 2008, five months after he was born.
The cause of death listed on the baby's death certificate is
hydrocephalus and bacterial meningitis. The bacterial infection,
according to a memo from the Illinois Department of Public Health,
"may be associated with the consumption of a powdered breast milk
fortifier."

The Enfamil brand powdered formula was fed to the baby while he was
being cared for in the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit at Rush-Copley.
In a statement released Thursday, Rush-Copley said, "We have the
utmost compassion for the baby and his family.

"Rush-Copley delivers 4,000 babies a year and the procedures followed
here are consistent with the standards of care provided to prematurely
born infants in the U.S."

The danger with powdered formula is that, unlike the liquid kind, it
cannot be sterilized, making it vulnerable to bacteria growing in it,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The most severe cases involve babies exposed to a bacteria called
Enterobacter sakazakii, or E-sak, which can lead to raging infections,
severe brain damage, and ultimately death, according to the CDC.
Amanda Carlin said son Connor died after the E-sak bacteria led to an
infection which caused the deadly form of meningitis.

The baby suffered from seizures and brain abscess. And his blood and
cerebral spinal fluid tested positive for the organism, the Health
Department document says.

During the week before Connor's illness, the Health Department memo
says, he was fed ready-to-feed liquid formula as well as breast milk
with powdered infant fortifier.

The powdered formula used by the hospital was Enfamil by Mead Johnson.
Connor consumed the product from Nov. 20 through Nov. 24 orally and
through a nasogastric tube, the Health Department says. The report
said the product was prepared at the hospital in a prep area/station,
not a dedicated formula preparation room.

On Dec. 3, 2007, Connor was transferred from Rush-Copley to the
University of Chicago because, McGray said, the family wanted the twin
boys together. Logan was being treated at the University of Chicago
for an intestinal condition.

Infants born prematurely, or those with weak immune systems, are at
greatest risk of being infected, according to the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. There is even a warning on powdered formula
containers. One brand warns: "... powdered infant formulas are not
sterile and should not be fed to premature infants or infants who
might have immune problems unless directed and supervised by your
baby's doctor."

Carlin said the hospital did not tell her about the risks of powdered
formula. She said she also didn't learn about her son being given the
powder, until she hired The Collins Law firm in Naperville.

"We didn't find out until afterward, when we got a hold of whatever
medical records we could get," McGray said. "That's the only way we
knew."

A CBS2/Beacon News investigation uncovered other cases in which
powdered formula was blamed for causing brain damage or death in
infants. There have been at least two Illinois cases, and cases in at
least 17 other states.

"It's not an isolated problem," said Ed Manzke, one of the attorneys
hired in Connor McGray's case. "There have been deaths all across the
country related to powder infant formulas. And what is so shocking
about it, is hardly anyone knows it."

A 2001 E-Sak outbreak in Tennessee led to a 2002 U.S. Food and Drug
Administration warning to health professionals. In a letter the FDA
wrote: ".. FDA recommends that powdered infant formulas not be used in
neonatal intensive care settings unless there is no alternative
available."

The FDA also said there are sterilized liquid fortifiers on the market
that can be used as an alternative. The FDA would not put a complete
ban on the powder and said it may be used in the NICU when no
appropriate liquid product is available.

Five years after this FDA warning, Connor McGray was given the
powdered formula, according to the Health Department document.
His family says he was getting stronger and doing well until he got
the powder.

Similar to Connor, Daniel Korte was born prematurely last year. He,
too, was fed powdered infant formula and was struck with the same
infection and meningitis. His parents said the contaminated formula
was fed to him at Mercy Medical Center in Des Moines, Iowa.

Daniel survived, but is living in a nursing facility on a ventilator.
"It basically turned his brain to mush," said Michelle Korte, Daniel's
mother. "He is ventilated and his upper brain is destroyed."

Korte said the hospital in this case also never warned her about the
risk associated with the formula. An attorney she hired, Andy
Weisbecker, said powdered formula manufacturers need to do a better
job of informing doctors and parents about the danger.

"More needs to be done to increase the level of knowledge about this
deadly bug," Weisbecker said. "Who knows how many parents are out
there with affected children who may still not be aware of a possible
connection between these illnesses and contaminated formula."

Federal regulators believe the number of cases are under-reported.
There may be other infants diagnosed with meningitis that have not
been checked for E-sak.

Babies are not just being sickened by formula in hospitals, however.
Parents unknowingly are buying the powdered formula for at-risk babies.
Stephen Meyer, an attorney at the Law Office of Nick Stein in Indiana,
has spent nine years working on E-sak cases. He said the FDA's warning
should have gone to consumers.

"Most moms would think 'If it's marketed to me, it's safe,'" said
Meyers. "Especially if it comes in a hospital gift bag."

Mead Johnson, manufacturer of powdered formula including Enfamil, said
its products are safe as long as they are used according to label
directions. The company said it has "taken the position that powdered
infant formula should not be used in neonatal intensive care settings
unless no alternative is available."

Tracey Noe, a spokesman for Abbott, which manufactures formula
including Similac, said it uses rigorous testing procedures, including
bacterial testing, on its powdered formulas.

"Abbott agrees with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration/Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention joint recommendation that powdered
formula should not be used in hospital neonatal intensive care units
— unless no nutritionally suitable alternative is available," Noe
said.
Both manufacturers have been sued by formula victims.

The parents of Connor McGray and Daniel Korte are also planning to
file lawsuits. In the meantime they are talking about what happened in
hopes of warning — and educating — doctors, hospital staff and
other parents about the potential danger of powdered formula.

"I want other people to be aware of it so they don't have to go
through what I did," Amanda Carlin said.

Christine Moyer of the Aurora Beacon News and Michele Youngerman and
Michelle Diotallevi of CBS2 contributed to this report.

http://cbs2chicago.com/local/baby.formula.tainted.2.863980.html

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Ending breastfeeding Part 2

It goes without saying that babies get their best nutrition from breastmilk. The thing that many people don't realise is that breastmilk should continue to make up the major part of your baby's diet for the first year of life, even after the introduction of solid foods.

Most parenting books are written on the assumption that once you introduce solids, then the breastfeeding will be coming to an end. Biologically speaking, human babies should be getting their mother's milk along with other foods until they indicate they are ready to wean completely. Breastfeeding can continue for as long as mother and baby like.

There is no time at which breastmilk deteriorates in quality or contains reduced amounts of important nutrients. Breastmilk is a living fluid, containing millions of active cells, passing on mother's immunities and antibodies and giving your baby the right balance of age-appropriate nutrients, building your baby's brain, body, immune system and satisfying many emotional needs. It is an amazing fact that breastmilk changes in order to meet the needs of your growing child.

And breastfeeding is about so much more than just the milk. It keeps your baby close to your heart, both literally and figuratively. Weaning your baby at a young age ends those special close times you have when breastfeeding, and changes the way you respond to your baby's needs. Breastfeeding is a wonderful tool for comforting and even for helping your baby to fall asleep. Warm milk, mother's arms, close to her heart, snuggling together, why be in a hurry to end that?