Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, when my daughter was 5’3” and 86 pounds, she was hospitalized.
You should get a consult at Children’s. Your care team should be seeing this as a medical emergency.
And pro tip: many nutritionists have eating disorders. Their obsess with food draws them to the profession. Not all of course, but more than other professions. If they aren’t getting weight on your older daughter every week, then you need to find someone else.
Hospitalized for what?
If eating disorder, that’s pretty clearly irrelevant to OP’s post. Her kid eats a lot, all day. And the number alone doesn’t tell you much for a growing kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, when my daughter was 5’3” and 86 pounds, she was hospitalized.
You should get a consult at Children’s. Your care team should be seeing this as a medical emergency.
And pro tip: many nutritionists have eating disorders. Their obsess with food draws them to the profession. Not all of course, but more than other professions. If they aren’t getting weight on your older daughter every week, then you need to find someone else.
Hospitalized for what?
Anonymous wrote:OP, when my daughter was 5’3” and 86 pounds, she was hospitalized.
You should get a consult at Children’s. Your care team should be seeing this as a medical emergency.
And pro tip: many nutritionists have eating disorders. Their obsess with food draws them to the profession. Not all of course, but more than other professions. If they aren’t getting weight on your older daughter every week, then you need to find someone else.