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Please don't give soy milk to your baby
Baby's Death Highlights Vegan Docs' Distortions
Tragic incident casts light on zealot doctors'disingenuous claims
and moral arrogance
by Craig Weatherby
The word "tragedy" is often misused in reference to any and all
deeply sorrowful events, regardless of the circumstances.
The term comes from ancient Greece , where a tragedy was a drama in
which a protagonist suffered downfall or destruction through a flaw
of character or a fateful conflict with the gods.
Serious misfortunes resulting from straightforward accidents, illness,
or natural disasters can certainly be very sad, but they're not
specifically tragic.
The 2004 incident in which the infant son born to a vegan couple
starved to death - which led to their recent murder conviction in
Atlanta - seems tragic in the truest sense.
Vegans are the strictest variety of vegetarian, and will eat no meat,
dairy, or animal products, including milk and eggs. Unlike vegans,
so-called "lacto-ovo" vegetarians will eat milk (lacto) products and
eggs (ovo). Worldwide, most vegetarians fall into this more moderate
category.
The tragic 2004 incident in Atlanta - which echoes similar deaths in
recent years - provides an opportunity to raise awareness of infants'
specific nutritional requirements, and to address some distortions
perpetrated by medical doctors who double as zealous advocates of
vegan diets.
Vegan diets are viable if nutritionally tricky options for informed
adults, but reckless application of these all-plant regimens can put
infants at risk.
Crown Shakur's tragic death
On May 9 of this year, Jade Sanders, aged 27, and Lamont Thomas, aged
31 were sentenced to life in prison for the death of their
malnourished 6-week-old baby boy, who was fed a diet consisting
largely of soy milk and apple juice.
A jury found the couple guilty of malice murder, felony murder,
involuntary manslaughter and cruelty to children.
The boy, named Crown Shakur, weighed just 3½ pounds when he died of
starvation on April 25, 2004.
The baby was born at home, and defense lawyers said that Sanders and
Thomas did not realize the baby was in danger. But the boy was so
emaciated when finally brought into the hospital - located just
across the street from his Atlanta home - that doctors could count
his bones through his skin.
His parents' negligence should not be misused to tar all vegan
mothers and fathers, most of whom are eager to meet their infants'
nutritional needs, which cannot be supplied by soy milk and apple
juice.
In fact, the Atlanta prosecutor did not blame Crown Shakur's parents'
vegan philosophy for the boy's death. Instead, he argued to the jury
that the couple neglected and underfed the child for unknown reasons,
and tried to use their quasi-religious approach to diet as a shield.
(The parents' defense bore similarities to the religious-rights
argument often used by Christian Science adherents accused of fatally
neglecting children's medical needs in favor of prayer.)
The Atlanta conviction follows two other convictions of vegan parents
found guilty of the deaths of vegan babies, in New York and Florida.
In 1990, the US FDA investigated after a two-month old girl in
California was hospitalized with severe malnutrition. Her parents had
fed her soy milk instead of infant formula. Because of this and a
similar incident in Arkansas , the FDA issued a warning on June 13,
1990. Since then, most brands of soy milk include small warning
labels.
The widespread perception of soy products as "health foods" seems to
have led some parents - particularly vegans - to mistakenly believe
that soy milk is a nourishing food for babies and children.
But unlike soy-based infant formulas, most soy milks - like the brand
given to baby Crown Shakur - does not contain added B-1 or other
nutrients essential to infants.
The subject of soy's exaggerated reputation as a highly healthful
food is too complex to address here. Suffice it to say that while
whole soy foods such as tofu seem to offer some preventive health
benefits, soy foods can block absorption of some nutrients.
While adult vegans can survive - and some may thrive - on their diets,
most take supplements to get nutrients scarce in plant foods, such as
vitamins B12 and D3 (a form proven superior to the vitamin D2 found
in plants).
But the risk of nutritional error to vegan-fed infants is
substantially greater because of their vulnerable status and special
needs.
Vegan-diet advocates ignore inconvenient truths Vital Choice friend
and acclaimed food writer Nina Planck penned an opinion piece about
the recent tragedy, which appeared on the op-ed page of The New York
Times, May 21, 2007. Nina Planck is the author of Real Food: What to
Eat and Why, which offers an excellent, engaging examination of the
time-tested and increasingly validated preventive health value of
traditional diets.
As she wrote, "This particular calamity - at least the third such
conviction of vegan parents in four years - may be largely due to
ignorance. But it should prompt frank discussion about nutrition. I
was once a vegan. But well before I became pregnant, I concluded that
a vegan pregnancy was irresponsible. You cannot create and nourish a
robust baby merely on foods from plants."
She went on to say, "Indigenous cuisines offer clues about what
humans, naturally omnivorous, need to survive, reproduce and grow:
traditional vegetarian diets, as in India , invariably include dairy
and eggs for complete protein, essential fats and vitamins. There are
no vegan societies for a simple reason: a vegan diet is not adequate
in the long run."
The following quotes from Nina Planck's op-ed essay in The New York
Times reveals some of the inconvenient truths underlying the Crown
Shakur starvation tragedy. (We added clarifying comments in brackets
[]):
"An adult who was well-nourished in utero and in infancy may choose
to get by on a vegan diet, but babies are built from protein, calcium,
cholesterol and fish oil [omega-3 DHA]. Children fed only plants will
not get the precious things they need to live and grow."
"Responsible vegan parents know that breast milk is ideal. It
contains many necessary components, including cholesterol (which
babies use to make nerve cells), [omega-3 DHA] and countless immune
and growth factors."
"[However, s]tudies show that vegan breast milk lacks enough
docosahexaenoic acid, or DHA, the omega-3 fat found in fatty fish."
"A vegan diet is equally dangerous for weaned babies and toddlers,
who need plenty of protein and calcium. Too often, vegans turn to
soy, which actually inhibits growth and reduces absorption of
protein and minerals."
"Humans prefer animal proteins and fats to cereals and tubers,
because they contain all the essential amino acids needed for life in
the right ratio. This is not true of plant proteins, which are
inferior in quantity and quality - even soy."
And as Nina writes on her web site, in regard to her Times essay,
"Among many sources for this piece, I interviewed a family
practitioner who treats many vegetarian and vegan families. The
doctor's comments were useful but too long for the Times. Here they
are:
'The most significant issue with vegan infants is growth. I have seen
cases of severe anemia and protein deficiency in vegan infants
resulting in hospitalization and blood transfusion. Most breast-fed
vegan children will do okay until solids are introduced, as long as
the vegan mother is well nourished. Most commonly you see Vitamin
B12 and iron deficiencies in vegan children.'
'Vegan families must pay close attention to protein sources, calcium,
vitamins D and B12, and iron. Often this can be achieved via
fortified foods, but I've seen that not all vegan parents want to
choose these types of foods. Most vegan families I've met don't
understand the importance of fat intake in the cognitive development
of the baby.'
Vegan docs' distortions regarding dietary fats The last point raised
by Nina Planck's physician-informant stems from ongoing research that
continues to strengthen the case for fish as a very smart part of
maternal diets. (To read about some of it, search our newsletter
archive for "children".)
Fatty fish like salmon, sablefish, and sardines earned their ancient
reputation as brain food for sound scientific reasons.
In addition to the abundant amounts of marine omega-3s needed to
ensure ...
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http://newsletter.vitalchoice.com/e_article000825834.cfm?x=b9Dw0J8,b1h4dhkJ
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