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ARTICLE |

Breast Feeding: A Guide to the Natural Feeding of Infants

JAMA. 1949;139(9):614. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02900260060034.
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ABSTRACT

This book would have been much easier to review had the author specifically stated its purpose and for whose benefit it was written. If it was written for the medical profession, it is entirely superfluous, full of clichés, devoid of scientific observations and with scarcely an original idea. If written for the guidance of nursing or prospective mothers, it is a mixture of medical and nursery jargon and pseudodoxy, which will hardly meet the requirements of a popular book. Many of its inaccuracies are naive; some of its statements amusing, other subject to challenge. The author has gone to some lengths to belabor the obvious and to omit the essential. The subject could lend itself to an excellent little work for the guidance of mothers or, on a truly scientific plane, for the instruction of practitioners; as it is, it is neither.

Among the more glaring inaccuracies in this little

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Country-Specific Mortality and Growth Failure in Infancy and Yound Children and Association With Material Stature

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