Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Alcohol during pregnancy is not a good thing for the developing baby.
Why would it be?
It’s like people don’t understand the point of the book. You are convinced any amount of alcohol is harmful to the fetus, even though the author clearly shows that there is no evidence to back up that assertion.
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol during pregnancy is not a good thing for the developing baby.
Why would it be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi Emily, I don't believe in getting health advice from an economist. Your advice about prenatal drinking was wrong.
And Emily’s argument about WHY drinking is ok (“the fetus is only a ball of cells so who cares”) is pseudoscientific BS.
Most of the book is good - where she reviews medical data and says some stuff about it. All she really did however was get to the same opinions the medical societies did, just a few years earlier.
But she should stay away from any biology arguments.
Anonymous wrote:Hi Emily, I don't believe in getting health advice from an economist. Your advice about prenatal drinking was wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Among the other problems I have with this (and I am extremely data- and research-driven myself) is that so many readers will come to the same conclusion that this NYT commenter did: "This article supports what has long been my general philosophy when it comes to my own kids: nothing really matters as long as I love and interact with them. Thanks for confirming!"
Saying X is 37% better than Y but sometimes harder to achieve because of Z does not equal "nothing really matters [but love]!" I definitely want people to know things like "so far we only see a small but significant benefit" instead of "IT'S SO AMAZING YOU MUST DO IT OR YOU ARE LITERALLY SATAN." I want them to understand things like "we don't have enough data yet" means that "WE KNOW FOR SURE THAT IF YOU DO X YOUR CHILD WILL BE A SUPERHARVARDGENIUS" is baloney. But those things *still mean* that there is a benefit to the first thing and we don't know *either way* about the second thing. They don't mean "eh, whatever, it doesn't really matter." I understand that is a backlash to the ridiculous expectations placed on mothers (much moreso than parents generally) to get everything "right." But it's not any more true.
Anonymous wrote:So, this new book says that breastfeeding does have some benefits, but not as much as the breastfeeding militants claim. Also that sleep training is probably a net positive for the family. And that both working and staying at home has benefits and drawbacks.
I feel like this article just shut down 80% of dcum flame wars.