Are there still wet nurses?
That’s it!
Peace,
mangeorge
I don’t know if there are still wet nurses, but milk donation definitely happens for babies whose moms can’t produce enough milk. There are Facebook groups to facilitate small-scale exchanges, as well as more “official” milk banks.
I heard some women on one of those daytime talk shows talking about getting shots to prevent lactation so they wouldn’t get stretch marks. I keep my tv in the other room on sometimes for company and don’t always get the full story.
I think of “Dr Oz” as a talk show.
Well just because you’re not breast feeding doesn’t mean you need a wet nurse. You can opt for formula.
According to Wikipedia there are, some places:
And have a sickly child that is of lower intelligence.
MODERATOR NOTE
Isilder. Your comment is out of place in the discussion of the OP. Call it sidetracking or threadshitting–it still derails things. No warning this time.
samclem, moderator
I have a friend who is of Asian descent, living in the US. He and his wife employed a wet nurse so she could go back to work ASAP (she is an MD). It is a common practice among people of their social status both here and at home.
Not a snark, but a serious question.
Why is this true of Isilder’s post but not ZipperJJ’s? Neither is on topic and both address the same subject, just on opposite extremes.
I want to understand the distinction for future reference.
I’m not a moderator, but I have an answer to your question: ZipperJJ’s post addressed an “excluded middle” situation with a fact. The post that was called out for threadshitting was stated as though it were factual, whereas it has not been established as such.
And establishing the factuality (or otherwise) of that statement really is beyond the scope of the thread.
Hmm…the way I see it, and hopefully the way the mods see it, is that I was correcting what I thought to be an incorrect assumption by the OP. Seemed to me that he thought that if a mother doesn’t breast feed then the only other option is to hire a wet nurse. He said his question arose from hearing, in passing, that some women take steps to cease their lactation and his immediate thought was “then how do babies get breast milk? Wet nurses?” and hence his question here.
I was merely pointing out, in case he didn’t know, that some women opt not to breast feed at all and there is no need for wet nurses, as they choose to formula feed.
I don’t know whether the OP knew this or not, but it is a true fact related to the OP’s question about what do women do when they do not lactate but have a baby to feed.