Anonymous wrote:This is OP. She’s anemic and a supplement hasn’t raised her iron enough to make her not anemic. So her doctor suggested high iron meals in addition to supplement for the next 3 months and then recheck. I do appreciate the suggestions but every time I ask something on DCUM it drives me nuts that multiple folks won’t just answer the question and instead second guess the premise of the question.
Thanks to folks who offered suggestions!
Anonymous wrote:Beef Jerky
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. She’s anemic and a supplement hasn’t raised her iron enough to make her not anemic. So her doctor suggested high iron meals in addition to supplement for the next 3 months and then recheck. I do appreciate the suggestions but every time I ask something on DCUM it drives me nuts that multiple folks won’t just answer the question and instead second guess the premise of the question.
Thanks to folks who offered suggestions!
When asking a question, it is most helpful to provide all of the info in your OP. Otherwise you set yourself up for wading through questions when you trickle information out. Anemic 5 yos are not common, of course people are going to question.
Not OP, but that information is unnecessary to answering the question. I see it all the time on DCUM, too. The question was what can she take to the pool for dinner that is high in iron. That's all that you need to know. Answer with foods that are high in iron that are easy to pack and eat without heating. That's it. You don't need any more info.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for the suggestions! In law school professors called it “fighting the hypo” (as in hypothetical) when students wouldn’t just answer the question but instead needed to change the question to something else. I’m noticing that now two responders are saying, “don’t give her iron for dinner, do it at other meals!” DCUM can’t resist fighting the hypo. It’s kind of fascinating. I wonder if I do it to other people or if I just don’t answer if I don’t have an answer to OP’s question. I am also going to notice if it happens so much in real life or if this is just a DCUM thing.
In DCUM we call this ^ being an insufferable walnut.
You could have just taken the advice and spared us the pseudo-intellectual lecture.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for the suggestions! In law school professors called it “fighting the hypo” (as in hypothetical) when students wouldn’t just answer the question but instead needed to change the question to something else. I’m noticing that now two responders are saying, “don’t give her iron for dinner, do it at other meals!” DCUM can’t resist fighting the hypo. It’s kind of fascinating. I wonder if I do it to other people or if I just don’t answer if I don’t have an answer to OP’s question. I am also going to notice if it happens so much in real life or if this is just a DCUM thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for the suggestions! In law school professors called it “fighting the hypo” (as in hypothetical) when students wouldn’t just answer the question but instead needed to change the question to something else. I’m noticing that now two responders are saying, “don’t give her iron for dinner, do it at other meals!” DCUM can’t resist fighting the hypo. It’s kind of fascinating. I wonder if I do it to other people or if I just don’t answer if I don’t have an answer to OP’s question. I am also going to notice if it happens so much in real life or if this is just a DCUM thing.
It's not that some of us aren't deliberately posting a direct answer to your question, but just giving you another perspective and option that you might not have thought of and could work out well...especially since " give her iron at other meals" (and other similar ideas posted upthread) isn't an unreasonable suggestion....AND it might actually "work" if you are open-minded and give it a try 1x or 2x a week.
There's no harm in this. There's a lot of us who have BTDT when it comes to chronic anemia .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Microbiologist here.
If she's anemic and needs iron-rich foods, don't hesitate to bring meat items. Meat contains much more usable iron than any legume or vegetable. Little meatballs or sausages are kid-friendly, but some contain so much filler that iron levels won't be very high - check ingredients on packages. Maybe make the meatballs yourself. The BEST is roast beef (unless she goes for the iron-rich liver), in slices or in little chunks. Toss in vinaigrette, or eat plain, salted to taste.
Cook and bring, cold, in a cooler with ice packs, or warm in a food thermos (but in pool weather, who wants hot food?). Don't take rich sauces, because that's microbe heaven.
What the heck does that have to do with anything?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for the suggestions! In law school professors called it “fighting the hypo” (as in hypothetical) when students wouldn’t just answer the question but instead needed to change the question to something else. I’m noticing that now two responders are saying, “don’t give her iron for dinner, do it at other meals!” DCUM can’t resist fighting the hypo. It’s kind of fascinating. I wonder if I do it to other people or if I just don’t answer if I don’t have an answer to OP’s question. I am also going to notice if it happens so much in real life or if this is just a DCUM thing.
Anonymous wrote:Microbiologist here.
If she's anemic and needs iron-rich foods, don't hesitate to bring meat items. Meat contains much more usable iron than any legume or vegetable. Little meatballs or sausages are kid-friendly, but some contain so much filler that iron levels won't be very high - check ingredients on packages. Maybe make the meatballs yourself. The BEST is roast beef (unless she goes for the iron-rich liver), in slices or in little chunks. Toss in vinaigrette, or eat plain, salted to taste.
Cook and bring, cold, in a cooler with ice packs, or warm in a food thermos (but in pool weather, who wants hot food?). Don't take rich sauces, because that's microbe heaven.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for the suggestions! In law school professors called it “fighting the hypo” (as in hypothetical) when students wouldn’t just answer the question but instead needed to change the question to something else. I’m noticing that now two responders are saying, “don’t give her iron for dinner, do it at other meals!” DCUM can’t resist fighting the hypo. It’s kind of fascinating. I wonder if I do it to other people or if I just don’t answer if I don’t have an answer to OP’s question. I am also going to notice if it happens so much in real life or if this is just a DCUM thing.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thank you for the suggestions! In law school professors called it “fighting the hypo” (as in hypothetical) when students wouldn’t just answer the question but instead needed to change the question to something else. I’m noticing that now two responders are saying, “don’t give her iron for dinner, do it at other meals!” DCUM can’t resist fighting the hypo. It’s kind of fascinating. I wonder if I do it to other people or if I just don’t answer if I don’t have an answer to OP’s question. I am also going to notice if it happens so much in real life or if this is just a DCUM thing.