Well to cut a very long story short, our third little man was a very large baby. Since being born he has gradually worked his way down through the percentiles and has come to rest on a much lower one than one he was born on. He has now been tracking this percentile for 5 months; so to my mind this is the one he should be on as birth weight is not really an indication of where your child will eventually end up.
Anyway we had taken him in for his routine vaccinations and another doctor mentioned that he appeared to be quite small and maybe he would need growth hormones. Well that freaked me out so I took him to our paediatrician, who I thought would be able to offer some more supportive advice. This is the advice I got:
* I should wean him immediately (he was eight months at the time), maybe go away for the weekend and let someone else feed him the solids.
* As this was our third child maybe my milk was no longer of the same nutritional value as it had been for the other two.
* If I didn't increase his weight before he turned a year then he may not reach his full genetic potential, so in other words he wouldn't grow to be as tall as he possibly could be.
Firstly there is no way on God's earth that I am going to leave my little man for a weekend, let alone my other two, so that he can be fed by someone else. Not to mention the engorgement that I might suffer, possible mastitis, seperation anxiety for the little man etc.
There is no evidence whatso ever that your milk for your third child is deficient in nutrients and believe me I have searched everywhere. If this was the case then all third and fourth babies etc. would be smaller than their older siblings, and what about mothers who successfully breastfeed multiples?
What is his genetic potential? How do we know that his genetic potential is not going to mean he will be shorter? My husband and I are reasonably tall, but if you look at his parents and both sets of great grandparents, then they are much shorter. Also the charts just plot the trend of growth over the first year and are not always indicative of what will happen over the next year. There are so many factors that come into play to determine the eventual height of a child. I should point out he is reaching all his developmental milestones and in some of them achieveing them before he should.
My husband just wants what's best for our son and he feels that if there is anything that we can do then we must try. Like I said to cut a very long story short, I need a paediatrician who doesn't buy into breastfeeding myths and can see beyond this to offer advice based on medical facts.