Home | Forum | Search
Babies - Growth and Development : Part 3
The Mother and Her Child
by William S. Sadler, M.D., Lena K. Sadler, M.D.

(Page 26 of 44)

The Weight

During the first year, nothing gives us so much information concerning the child's general well-being as the weight. Such a record will not only enlighten the mother concerning the development of the child, but the grown-up child appreciates the record and preserves it along with the other archives of babyhood days. Every Sunday morning, when the father is at home, the baby should be weighed and an accurate record kept. It is important that the baby be weighed each time in the same garments - shirt, band, diaper, and stockings - for every ounce must be accounted for.

Until the baby is five or six months old he should gain from four to eight ounces a week. Anything short of this is not enough and should be reported to the physician. After six months the gain is about a pound each month. This varies somewhat; possibly during the tenth and eleventh month the gain is lessened, but by the close of the first year the baby should have trebled its birth weight.

Dr. Griffith gives us the following very interesting bit of information concerning the weight of boys and girls after the first year, and to him also belongs the credit for the accompanying table showing the growth, height, and weight of the child up to sixteen years of age.

After the first year we notice that, taking it all together, there is a gradual increase in the number of pounds and a decrease in the number of inches added yearly, four inches being gained in both the second and third years, three inches in the fourth and fifth years, and after this two inches a year. The gain in weight is four pounds yearly from the age of three to that of seven years, then five, then six, and then about nine pounds. It sometimes happens that at about the age of nine in girls and eleven in boys there is almost a cessation of growth for a short time. Later, at about twelve years, girls take on a particularly rapid growth, and decidedly exceed boys of the same age in weight, and sometimes in height also. At fifteen or sixteen years the rapidity of growth in girls, both in weight and height, will be greatly diminished, while boys of this age will often begin to develop very rapidly, and will soon materially exceed the other gender in both respects.

General Development

The accompanying illustration, taken from Dr. Yale, represents the developmental changes at one, five, nine, thirteen, seventeen, and twenty-one years. Each figure is divided into four equal parts, and as we watch the development from the baby who at one year, as Dr. Yale says, is four heads high, at the age of twenty-one the legs and the trunk have much outgrown the growth of the head, so that at this age the head is only two-thirteenths or less of the whole length of the body. The legs have grown more rapidly and equal one-half the entire body length. The trunk has not kept pace with the legs, for as you will see from the diagram the line reaches the navel of the child in one year, while in the adult it is much lower. The rapid growth of the legs is accomplished after nine years of age.

The proportions of the head, chest, and abdomen are exceedingly important in the growing child. At the end of the first year the head, chest, and abdomen are about uniform in circumference. The head may measure one-fourth of an inch more, but the chest and abdomen should both measure eighteen inches in circumference at this time. Should the head or the abdomen be two inches larger than the chest; the attention of the physician should be called to it, for either are indicative of conditions that should be carefully investigated.

Normal Breast Weaning

As a general rule the normal, healthy, breast-fed baby is given a feeding of a bottle each day after he is ten months old. These bottles are increased in number until, by the time the baby is a year old, he is gradually weaned from the breast. Should the ninth month of baby's life arrive in the hot summer months we urge the mothers to continue breast feeding, with possibly the addition of some fruit juices, as noted elsewhere, until early autumn. Under no circumstances should the baby be weaned and compelled to use cow's milk during the season of the year when the risks of contamination are greatest. If the baby is nursed up to the close of his first year he hardly need be trained to use the bottle, but may take his food from a cup. From one to two months should always be consumed in weaning the baby, unless sudden weaning is necessitated by ill health, as noted elsewhere. The baby should have, if possible, from thirty to forty days to accustom himself to cow's milk exclusively.

If the child is weaned slowly there should be no trouble with the breasts, but in the instance of sudden weaning the mother should restrict her liquids, put on a tight breast binder, and for a day or two should take a dose of a saline cathartic, which will assist in taking care of the liquids and therefore decrease the secretion of milk.

Normal Bottle Weaning

If the bottle food is agreeing with the baby he should be allowed to use it up to the end of the first year when he will be given whole milk with possibly the addition of a little lime water. We see no reason why the child should give up his bottle during the second year unless other food is refused - unless he will not accept other food than from his bottle - and if you are convinced that he has formed the "bottle habit," then the milk should be put into a tiny cup or glass, and he should learn to sip it along with his solid foods; but if he takes his other foods without any hesitancy, then we know no reason why he should not take his milk in this comfortable manner from his bottle at least two or three feedings each day.

« Previous     Next »


About the Author

Dr. William S. Sadler M.D. was a well-known American psychiatrist and college teacher in the school of medicine at the University of Chicago. For over sixty years he practiced his profession in Chicago, thirty-three years being associated in practice with his wife, Dr Lena Kellogg Sadler. The doctors were pioneers in the research on the mysterious Urantia Papers.

  In this book
  1. The Expectant Mother
  2. Story of the Unborn Child
  3. Birthmarks and Prenatal Influence
  4. The Hygiene of Pregnancy
  5. Complications of Pregnancy
  6. Toxemia and its Symptoms
  7. Preparations for the Natal Day
  8. The Day of Labor
  9. Twilight Sleep and Painless Labor
  10. Sunrise Slumber and Nitrous Oxide
  11. The Convalescing Mother
  12. Baby's Early Days
  13. The Nursery
  14. Why Babies Cry
  15. The Nursing Mother and Her Baby
  16. The Bottle-Fed Baby
  17. Milk Sanitation
  18. Home Modification of Milk
  19. The Feeding Problem
  20. Baby's Bath and Toilet
  21. Baby's Clothing
  22. Fresh Air, Outings and Sleep
  23. Baby Hygiene
  24. Growth and Development
» Part 1
» Part 2
» Part 3
» Part 4
» Part 5
  25. The Sick Child
  26. Baby's Sick Room
  27. Digestive Disorders
  28. Contagious Diseases
  29. Respiratory Diseases
  30. The Nervous Child
  31. Nervous Diseases
  32. Skin Troubles
  33. Deformities and Chronic Disorders
  34. Accidents and Emergencies
  35. Diet and Nutrition
  36. Caretakers and Governesses
  37. The Power of Positive Suggestions
  38. Play and Recreation
  39. The Puny Child
  40. Teaching Truth
Related Topics
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Developmental Disabilities
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Articles & Books
Your Baby's Amazing Brain - Baby Minds: Brain-Building Games Your Baby Will Love
Remember that feeling of excitement and exhilaration the day your baby was born? You examined her tiny face and gazed with amazement into her unaccustomed eyes wondering what she must be feeling in her first experience of the outside world.
The Road Not Taken: Turning Boys Away from Their Inner Life - Raising Cain: Protecting the Emotional Life of Boys
Luke, thirteen, pauses at the office door, undecided whether to take his baseball cap off or leave it alone; he pulls it off and steps in the room-the school psychologist's office. 'Come on in, Luke. Have a seat in the big chair.'
Are You Concerned About Your Child? - Normal Children Have Problems, Too: How Parents Can Understand and Help
Eight-year-old Joshua looks unhappy most of the time. He is easily disappointed and reduced to tears. Playmates don't call as much, and Joshua says sadly that no one likes him. He has become whiny, and he shadows his mother around the apartment.

© 2008 eNotAlone.com