The Baby Tribe

115: Is Formula Harmful? Recalls, Switching Brands, and What the Evidence Actually Says

Afif EL-Khuffash & Anne Doherty

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0:00 | 41:54
In this episode, Afif and Anne unpack the recent formula recalls in Ireland and internationally, explaining what happened, what parents should do, and why recalls usually mean safety systems are working. They discuss switching formula brands, what changes are normal, when not to switch (especially with prescribed formulas), and clear guidance on safe formula prep. Finally, they tackle the big question: is formula harmful? They explain what the research actually shows about breast milk vs formula, why many headline claims are muddied by confounders, and why parents shouldn’t feel guilt or fear about feeding their baby Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
SPEAKER_00

This show is part of the Headstuff Podcast Network.

SPEAKER_01

The Baby Tribe is proudly sponsored by Happytummy.ie, the exclusive distributor of Bayagaya Probiotics, providing support for gut and oral health for the whole family. Is formula harmful? Well, if you've been online for more than four minutes as a new parent, the answer apparently ranges from liquid gold alternative to basically bleach in a tin. Today on the Baby Tribe, we're doing something radical. We're slowing down, we're talking about the recent formula recalls in Ireland and internationally, what that actually means for families and why a recall is scary but not a sign that the entire system is broken. We'll also talk about switching formula brands, what is normal, what is not, and when you absolutely should not be messing around with changing formulas. And finally, we're tackling the big one, what the research really shows about breast milk versus formula. We are absolutely acknowledging the real benefits of breastfeeding while also stepping away from the idea that formula is harmful, risky, or something parents should apologize for. So there's no fear-mongering, no pretending off-feeding choices are identical, just evidence, context, and a bit of sanity. So let's do it. And before we get started, I just want to thank happytummy.ie for sponsoring the Baby Tribe podcast. And I've started taking the gum probiotic one and it's really good.

SPEAKER_02

Good. Yeah. The dental one, the prodentist one. It looks like it's really good.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, no, it is. I'm really, really, really, really enjoying it. So, Anne, how are you?

SPEAKER_02

I'm good. I'm good. I see that we are grasping the nettle and dealing with the spicy topics like we promised.

SPEAKER_01

Well, yeah, I know.

SPEAKER_02

And we're gonna keep doing this until we get cancelled, apparently.

SPEAKER_01

Well, the problem is you're uncancellable because there's nothing to cancel with you because you're not on social media. No. I'm the one that is putting my life on the line here for our dear listeners.

SPEAKER_02

For your your life on the line. Yeah, yeah. My uh because I'm likely to walk away from you. Am I not your life though?

SPEAKER_01

No, no? You are you are yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Me and the kids and buddy, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Well remember them. Buddy anyway, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Buddy anyway, yeah, fair.

SPEAKER_01

Buddy anyway. Now, and I'm really tired. I think we need to start going to bed earlier because you stay up, you stay up quite late watching your shows.

SPEAKER_02

Oh my god, Fife. And I'm not doing this now.

SPEAKER_01

I wait for you to go to bed.

SPEAKER_02

You're more than able to put yourself to bed if you'd like to go, Feef. Love.

SPEAKER_01

No, but like I can't go to bed knowing that's a good thing. No, it's weird.

SPEAKER_02

That's weird. That is weird. Why is it weird? Just put yourself to bed like a normal human adult, will you?

SPEAKER_01

And sometimes I check on her to see, oh, she's still watching TV, she's still watching TV. Then I peek in and she's been asleep for like an hour.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and I might even be watching TV.

SPEAKER_01

No. She leaves, she leaves, she leaves the TV on.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, to keep me company while I read sometimes.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I know. I know. It's just very confusing. But I mean, I'm going to bed really early tonight. And you'll come and you're coming with me. Anyway, we're gonna talk about formulas today.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. I'm actually glad we're talking about this, to be honest. And I know we've done what we've done kind of formula, well, no, we've kind of we've done breastfeeding and stuff like that before. A little bit about formula, but I actually think, yeah, just doing a straightforward, concise, objective information piece is very good.

SPEAKER_01

Well, Katie and I at the very, very start of the Baby Tribe did a couple of formula episodes which were, I think, very informative and people still listen to them. But the purpose of today's ones is to reorient ourselves and talk about formula's been in the forefront of the news for a while. And I'm seeing people capitalizing on this, unfortunately, on Instagram and other social media networks where they are outlining their risks of formula and ah, so not the actual risks associated with the contaminated batches.

SPEAKER_02

They're now using it to like paint all formula as bad.

SPEAKER_01

Well, they're framing formula as risky, yeah, which which I really hate. And again, they're capitalizing on. No, absolutely not. And I, you know, challenge some of it sometimes on social media, but I think it's important to talk about it. So for today's episode, we're gonna talk about three different things to do with formula. We're gonna talk about the formula recall, we're gonna talk about can you switch formula brands if you want to? And we're gonna finally talk about whether formula is harmful for your baby or not. What about the formula recall? So, as a parent, you obviously are quite worried when you're hearing about these formula recalls that are happening, and it may sow doubt in I guess the manufacturing process, or again, I've seen these um posts on social media saying when are formula companies going to be held um accountable accountable or to a higher standard. Now, I'm not saying this defending formula companies, I'm not in the business of you know defending them. However, just to kind of maybe start with the reason there are recalls is because they are made accountable. It is because they the standard of the food monitoring, it's one of the most monitored food items out there.

SPEAKER_02

Good, unrightly so.

SPEAKER_01

Unrightly so, absolutely.

SPEAKER_02

But again, the the European legislation on all of this is very, very stringent.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And obviously the reporting mechanisms for any manufacturing issues are working. So, what exactly happened?

SPEAKER_01

Basically, there has been a recall initially of formula products initially manufactured by Nestle, and then Denone was involved as well. And because these manufacturers that are based in Ireland manufacture formula for pretty much good chunks of the world, good chunks of the world, the recall has extended to many countries around the world as far as far as Singapore and beyond.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, and is it that the same kind of factories were making multiple milk brands, or is it that different milk brands and different factories were sourcing ingredients from the same sources internationally?

SPEAKER_01

Both basically. Okay, yeah. So the culprit was arachidonic acid oil that they imported from China that appeared to contain a toxin called cereolide, I think that's how it's pronounced.

SPEAKER_02

Cereulide, yeah. Yeah. From Bacillus cereus.

SPEAKER_01

It's very serious.

SPEAKER_02

Stop now. No, so bacillus cereus is a bacteria that produces this toxin. Yes. Cereolide.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Um, it doesn't mean that there's bacteria in the milk, though.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, but they think that they may be this toxin in the milk. Now, the word toxin may be scary.

SPEAKER_02

Which had been produced by bacteria before it was sterilized.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_02

And the toxin remained.

SPEAKER_01

Correct. Okay. Now the word toxin sounds scary, but what we mean by toxin is it is not a bacteria that is potentially present in those milk products. It is um a chemical they produce. A chemical that they produce that can cause vomiting and diarrhea.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Right. The reason bacteria produce this is because it promotes their spread, right? You ingest it.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, yeah, and then it goes everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

You vomit.

SPEAKER_02

It goes everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

You also explode from the other end. And you and this is how bacteria survive.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, they spread around then to other people. And actually, Bacillus cereus is actually most associated with um kind of reheated rice and those kind of foods. Yeah. So, you know, when people say, Oh my god, you have to make sure that you reheat your rice and bring it to a really high temperature and all that kind of stuff. Yeah, it's to kill the bacillus cereus. Yeah. Okay. But if the toxin is already in the rice, you can still get sick because it is heat resistant. Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

The toxin is heat resistant, extremely heat resistant. So do you remember ever having something and then feeling very unwell and becoming violently unwell for about 24 hours and then you're a grand.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and but and then if it happens really soon after you've eaten that food, it's probably toxin mediated because it was purely bacteria.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Like, I don't know, loads of other reactive food poisoning bacteria. They take a little while to set in.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, they take a little while to build up in your system and produce the toxin that eventually, but if you ingest the toxin directly, you can become ill very quickly.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And then you're kind of grand.

SPEAKER_02

You're grand because you don't have any bacteria necessarily. It's a toxin that's made you see.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So here's a tip. The next time you maybe have a little bit too much to drink, and you hung over the next day and you become violently unwell in order to seem it's a cerellide. Clearly, it's definitely I must have ingested cerellide. Yeah, that's 100%. Exactly. So there's the tip of the day. So the reason there was a recall is as we said, the cerolide is quite heat resistant. So the method that we use to prepare formula, okay, and we'll talk about that in a minute, doesn't get rid of the toxin.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_02

So how heat resistant is it?

SPEAKER_01

It is so it doesn't get destroyed by mixing it at 100 degrees.

SPEAKER_02

So boiling water won't get rid of it, hence the recall, because it will remain in the milk.

SPEAKER_01

Now, although there has been a recall, so far, to my knowledge, at the time of recording, there hasn't been a reported case of a child or or or baby becoming unwell because of this. Okay. So the recall is kind of precautionary.

SPEAKER_02

It's preempting issues.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, exactly. And what families should do today is it's really important to check the batch number because we talked about it's cost brands. Yes, it is not brand dependent at the moment.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So it is batch dependent. So check the batch number, um, check the FSAI website, and that gives you the different batches that may be affected, and you can always go back to wherever you bought the milk and get a full refund. Okay, and a lot of them are saying you don't even need a receipt, okay? So that's what you should do today. That doesn't mean that um all of the formulas are affected. That doesn't mean that the manufacturing process was a problem.

SPEAKER_02

I suppose there was a problem with one of the ingredients.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_02

And then when they did their screening, it identified the issue. Have there been cases internationally of babies being sick?

SPEAKER_01

So there have been two babies that unfortunately passed away in France that they are investigating. Okay. Currently, there is no link between that they both consumed batches that contain the serolite. However, they are not proven link. There's no proven link, right? And they're isolated. There hasn't been any more cases. Okay. You would anticipate that they may there'd be more widespread cases, not of death but of vomiting and diarrhea if it was a real problem. But at the moment it doesn't appear to be.

SPEAKER_02

So unfortunately, these two babies became very unwell, and because of a potential link, it's been fully investigated. Exactly. But it's also potential potentially true that it could have been a different cause that caused them to be called to become unwell.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and again, it's it's it's a it's a sort of due diligent thing that people are doing in terms of it. So um basically, people may ask why didn't they check for this before the formula was distributed to the market? You know, why are they doing a recall now?

SPEAKER_02

Well, I assume that they it's it's the same with any manufacturing industry that they check X amount of um X amount of I don't know products per batch.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, they do that after they distribute it. However, there are also checks that happen beforehand.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So they check everything before they start manufacturing the milk.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

And those initial checks did not detect anything. Okay. And the later, more s more sensitive batch checks, it is what picked them up.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So it is another, I guess, safety layer that they do after they distribute milk to make sure that the milk is fine. And I guess this should reassure parents that the checks and balances are there even after they distribute milk that they deem safe while they're manufacturing. So these are all measures. It's not a problem. An ongoing quality control. It doesn't just stop when it hits the shelf. Yes, it's not a system in free fall. It is a I guess a demonstration that the checks and balances work, right?

SPEAKER_02

The the quality control.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And the risk of a baby becoming unwell after ingesting the batches that are affected is extremely low.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. How much of this toxin is in the milk? Is it like if it went through if the ingredients and then the initial checks all passed, is it a very low concentration, or is it, you know, because obviously the original screening was fine.

SPEAKER_01

It's likely traces. You know, tiny trace amounts. So what should the parents watch out for? It's vomiting and diarrhea that can happen very quickly, and then it usually settles within 24 hours.

SPEAKER_02

The issue is that if babies have that sounds like about ha mo half the things that kids get these days.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, but in babies, babies can get dehydrated very quickly. Okay. And that's where the issue is. Whereas in an older child where you can maybe manage them at home with sips of water or an electrolyte solution and maybe small amounts of feeds, you can't do that with babies because if they're vomiting everything, they can get dehydrated very quickly. And that's why you need to be a bit vigilant about this.

SPEAKER_02

But I think anybody who has a young baby who's got significant vomiting and diarrhea, they're going to be taking them to get checked out anyway.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_02

Right? And if this is a milk-associated toxin-mediated problem, once you guard against the diarrhea and the vomiting and the dehydration and it runs its course, is the baby then likely to remain well afterwards?

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. So it's not like you know the way people hear about like salmonella food poisoning associated with chicken or something like that. It's not like that because it's not a bacterial infection, it's not going to keep on going.

SPEAKER_01

No, it's it's a very short-lived, but it could be significant illness. Okay. Okay. If you have switched batches already and your baby has consumed an affected batch, you know, a few days ago or even a couple of days ago, then the danger window is gone.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So if you don't get symptoms within 24 hours of consuming the affected formula, you're not going to get symptoms.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

And I think that's reassuring for parents. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

But do we think that they've captured like all the batches that are affected, or is the warning going to continue to move across brands and increase batch numbers?

SPEAKER_01

I mean, we don't know. I mean, initially, when the first recall happened, you remember I told you the nature of these things is that they will expand. They may test more rigorously, more batches and things like that, and they may just be a bit more vigilant to recall more batches just to be safe. So the nature of these things is that there's usually an increased recall. Do you remember the spinach one that happened not so long ago?

SPEAKER_02

I'm still convinced we were sick from that, but anyway, go ahead.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So, I mean, you know, initially it was one and then it expanded and then it sort of died down. And I think that's what might happen here as well. We're taking a quick break to thank happytummy.ie, the official distributor of Biogaia probiotics, for supporting the baby tribe.

SPEAKER_02

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SPEAKER_01

Visit happytummy.ie to learn more and give your crew the gift of a happy tummy and a healthy smile. Hey there, Baby Tribe listeners. Did you know that we've got some amazing bonus material just for you? Baby Tribe Shorts is here. Quick evidence-based breakdown of all things science when it comes to mum and baby. You can find it as part of the Headstuff Podcast Network. You can subscribe to Headstuff Plus for as little as 5 Euro a month. We'll give you quick evidence-based takes on science behind maternal and infant health.

SPEAKER_02

And the best part is it's just 5 euro a month which helps support us and supports Headstuff and all the incredible shows they produce.

SPEAKER_01

You can find all the details on Headstuff Podcasts.com. So parents might ask, okay, fine, I don't want to give the brand that is affected by the batch.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, so I think likely a significant or a proportion of parents may decide to either change brands or to if if they're combin like combination feeding with um breast and bottle may decide to move more back to breast milk or whatever's available. So what what can they do to try and give themselves options?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, first of all, I mean if you're combination feeding, please don't put yourself under pressure to up the amount of breastfeeding that you're doing. If that's going to impact on your well-being, your mental health, your time, do not feel that pressure. Because again, I've seen this on social media saying just go back to breastfeeding.

SPEAKER_02

I know. You see, this is my issue. I just there's enough guilt, guilt mongering out there like for for new mothers or parents of very young children who are bloody tired, yeah. Um, that if if they're not breastfeeding their child enough or at all, you know, so it's just it's just uh opportunism, really, isn't it?

SPEAKER_01

It is opportunism, and you're seeing people saying, See, see, I told you you should have breastfed, see, because look what happens when you give formula, and that really irks me. I mean, you know, we had, I guess, when our kids were young, um one of our kids was a combination, yeah, mostly formula.

SPEAKER_02

Like our first child, I found it very hard to breastfeed her. And a fief was not a lactation consultant at the time, and a fief hadn't a clue.

SPEAKER_05

So I'm sorry.

SPEAKER_02

I know, that's okay. I'm just saying some people don't think that I had this like lactation consultant at home. I didn't, um, and I found it really, really hard. And we combo fed her, and I think I weaned her at about like I fully weaned her at about four months because it was just so difficult.

SPEAKER_01

And you felt guilty.

SPEAKER_02

Oh my god, yeah. But then with our son, he was just so much easier to feed. He was a different baby, he'd a different latch. I was a little bit less anxious as a mother. My first had come through combo feeding and weaning out like from breast milk at about four months and was just fine. Thanks a million. Yeah. So I kind of I think I felt less guilty overall, so it's probably more relaxed going into it as well. Yeah. For people who are choosing to bottle feed their babies, like, and they decide to move away from a specific brand because of this. What's the easiest thing to do? What like what are the options?

SPEAKER_01

So you can just switch brands, by the way.

SPEAKER_02

I know, but you see, I remember, I remember our first was quite fussy. That's one of the reasons she was hard to breastfeed. So she was quite fussy about things. Now it could have been that that's just how she was as a baby, and I suspect retrospectively that's probably it. She was just a fussy baby.

SPEAKER_01

She didn't lick it off the floor.

SPEAKER_02

That's true, she got it from you. But um he's disgusted. That backfired. I know. So, like it I would have worried a lot, actually, if to be honest, if I was trying to switch brands with her. And I know from talking to other mothers at the time who had fussy babies, and they were trying to find, oh, do I need to use this kind of milk or that kind of milk? And there's a million different bits of advice and a whole host of advertising being aimed at you. So when you say that babies, you can just switch brands, can you really? Right. Thank you.

SPEAKER_01

That was a lovely segue into my rant about switching.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, good. Rant away.

SPEAKER_01

So there is this perception that switching brands is more complicated than switching mortgages. It is not.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Each brand will make you think subliminally that switching away from their brand is bad.

SPEAKER_02

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

Right? And that their brand is best. And unfortunately, there are some healthcare providers that would also make you think that switching brands is bad for baby. Right? Here's the news flash. Babies aren't the brand snobs. The stage one formulas are so tightly regulated by the EU that the macro and micronutrients in them is almost identical from brand to brand.

SPEAKER_02

What about the ones that are the for hungry babies? Those ones.

SPEAKER_01

So just cast those aside for now. Okay. We will address that in a minute, right? But if your baby is on a regular stage one formula, be it just a plain stage one, or has a fancy name after it, advanced, organic, gold, they're all the same.

SPEAKER_02

They're all the same.

SPEAKER_01

Right. The reason they have all of these extra names, fancy names in front of them is to charge you more.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. So it's basically like if broccoli comes from a fancy looking field or broccoli comes from a less fancy field next door, it's still broccoli.

SPEAKER_01

It is still broccoli. Gotcha. Yes. And we spoke about this at the start. Some manufacturers will do several brands of the same milk.

SPEAKER_02

And are they the actual same? Yes. And do they come from the same? Like literally, it's just the packaging. Look at the look at the recall.

SPEAKER_01

They just spend more on the advertising for some of them. The recall is across brands. What does that tell you?

SPEAKER_02

Well, it it could be just mean that the arachidonic acid was an essential nutrient or essential component of making the milk. Therefore it had to be used. Yes.

SPEAKER_01

So you can switch brands, right? Okay. It is not harmful to switch brands.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

And I'm talking about the run of milk stage one.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

If your baby is on stage two, yeah. Still switch brands if you want. Okay. Okay. Now, a small number of babies, like fuzzy babies, as you label them, right? May have a bit more gassiness for a couple of days.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

But they may their their stool color may change.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Um, they may take slightly less milk for a couple of days, but those are a minority of babies.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

And that is the extent of what might happen.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So feel free to change brands, right? I'm not gonna tell you which brands to pick. They're all the same to me.

SPEAKER_02

Just check the batches.

SPEAKER_01

Just check the batches. And if if if it makes you feel better to switch brands, absolutely do. To be honest with you, if it was my baby, I would switch away from the brand that is affected by batches, by batch recalls. And I would just pick up sure it's multiple brands now. Yeah, but you can pick one that hasn't been affected. If you want, so there is no evidence that switching to a different formula does any good or any harm. Right?

SPEAKER_02

I'd probably stay with the same and just check the batches.

SPEAKER_01

Fine, we're very fussy baby. We're doing people. The one thing I would say is do fight over it. Do not accidentally switch stage. I've had a couple of parents where their babies are around four or five months saying, Can I just switch to stage two from now? No. The answer is no. You cannot give stage two before six months of age. Okay. It has double the amount of iron in it, and that's too much iron for a baby that is less than six months of age.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

In fact, the recommendation is that you stick with stage one formula until a year of age.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

After which you can switch to whole fat cow milk.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

That's it.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Simple. If you want to avail of the discounts that can be applied to stage two. Stage two, you can switch from six months.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

And that that is fine.

SPEAKER_03

So that's important. Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Again, what I said does not apply if your child is on a specialized formula.

SPEAKER_02

So what about the hungry baby formulas? Not the not the specialized kind of hydrolyzed protein-e kind of prescription ones. Yes. But the stuff that's still on the supermarket shelves, but it's for hungry babies, all of that kind of stuff.

SPEAKER_01

Hungry baby formulas should be avoided at all costs. They're horrendous.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, okay. So not related to the recall. Not related to the record.

SPEAKER_01

You just don't you don't agree with them. Don't like hungry baby formulas. Go back to our very first or second episode of the baby tribe, and I tell you why, basically. Don't like them. In short, hungry baby formulas. So the the the makeup of the protein in formulas is 60% whey, 40% casein.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Right? Whey is the more liquidy protein. Casein is the more goopy protein that sits in your tummy and forms a gelatinous goop and it's long takes longer to digest. Hungry baby formulas are 80% casein, 20% whey. They are made to keep your baby fuller for longer, to help them sleep. All bullshit.

SPEAKER_02

He feels strongly about this, doesn't he?

SPEAKER_01

I do, sorry. Yeah. So I wouldn't, I wouldn't, um, I wouldn't bother with hungry baby formulas. Go back to the old episode and and you'll heal the full, you'll hear the full the full-on rant. So, in short, you can just switch formulas.

SPEAKER_02

Switch formulas if you wish. Check batches. Yes. Uh, batch numbers. Um, don't feel guilty about bottle feed feeding your child if that's what's right for you and your family. Yeah um and be aware that if they do, if you do have a baby who is nauseous or sorry, who is vomiting or diarrhea, that they just get them checked out. And if it is potentially related to this cerealide toxin, yeah, that it will pass.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Again, just to emphasize if your baby is on a special preterm formula or is it has cow milk protein allergy and is on a hydrolyzed formula and a formula that has been prescribed by your doctor, go back to them. Yes, go back to the person who prescribed it. Okay, we are talking about run-of-the-mill stage one formulas on the supermarket shelves, not on the pharmacy shelves. Right for the final segment, um, honey bunch.

SPEAKER_02

We got here we got here very fast.

SPEAKER_01

Is formula harmful?

SPEAKER_02

Oh, yeah, let's address this. So risks benefit.

SPEAKER_01

I heard somebody recently say breast milk is the biological norm. You know what else is a biological norm? Death.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, stop! Oh my god, that took a turn for the grim there very, very quickly. No, why do you think that that that's an okay analogy in this episode?

SPEAKER_01

Let me let me let me caveat. I'm a huge advocate of breastfeeding. I think breastfeeding is a fantastic thing to do. I think it has so many benefits for mom and baby and breast milk is a little bit magic. It is a little bit magic and it's fantastic. We're not here to bash breastfeeding. No, not at all. And I'm a lactation consultant, so all of you lactation consultants out there, don't come at me.

SPEAKER_02

Ah, they'll do that anyway.

SPEAKER_01

I know people love coming at me. But what I want to talk about is maybe the language that is being used sometimes, yeah, and reframing things in an objective way. And again, I'm not here to shy away from the differences between formula and breast milk. Okay, but I hate the term formula is harmful, it is not harmful.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I think um it's just not accurate.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, formula is a regulated substitute designed to meet nutritional needs, yes, and that is factually accurate.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, 100%.

SPEAKER_01

It's good food, yes, and most long-term statements, formula causes X claims come from observational studies where family socioeconomic factors are tangled up with feeding choices.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So a lot of the time when you look at studies comparing formula to breastfeeding, there's so many other confounders.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

That breastfeeding can sometimes be a proxy for wellness or affluence or support or time off work. Yes, exactly.

SPEAKER_02

How many kids are at home?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, exactly. Now, where breastfeeding benefits are the clearest, right? And I'll add to that where formula is not harmful, just different, it comes from studies looking at preterm babies.

SPEAKER_02

So vulnerable babies.

SPEAKER_01

Vulnerable babies, okay. So we know, and this is my bread and butter, that babies that receive human milk, preferably mothers their mother's own milk, preterm babies, do better than babies that receive a formula.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_02

Now, when you say do better, what do you mean by do better?

SPEAKER_01

So several things. There's less um necrotizing entrocolitis, which is a devastating tummy infection that preterm babies get.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

They have less infections, they have shorter hospital stay.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

And they have less um incidence of chronic lung disease, which is the kind of condition of lung prematurity that babies get.

SPEAKER_02

So the magic bits in breast milk that aren't really just about food supports immature and vulnerable organ systems in a preterm baby. That's what it comes down to.

SPEAKER_01

We also know that preterm babies that have received their mother's own milk during their neonatal intensive care state by a year of age, their heart function is much closer to term babies.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

When you compare it to babies that are preterm that are received predominantly formula.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. Donor milk kind of sits in between.

SPEAKER_02

That's so interesting.

SPEAKER_01

Which shows you that the biological specificity of breast milk.

SPEAKER_02

So, like it is that magic thing again that we were talking about that is specific to all of those weird biological cues that we can't see that a mother's body just responds to.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

You know, it's not like you sit down and go, hmm, the baby looks like they might have a snotty nose. I think I'm going to program my boobs a specific way. It already happens. Yeah. It happens without even thinking about it. So that's the magic bit. But so it still doesn't take away from the fact that formula as a food is not harmful.

SPEAKER_01

No, it is not harmful. No. And anybody that says that it's harmful has an agenda. Has an agenda, right? And you have to sort of take those statements in context, right? When the World Health Organization talks about breastfeeding being the best and safest way of feeding your children, and when they talk about the potential harms of formula, right? What they mean is in resource-poor countries, when the access to clean water is not there, when um you know preparation of clean formula um is an issue. And yes, that's when formula can potentially be harmful if you don't prepare it well. And you know, and you have incorrect mixing, you have potentially non-sterile methods of preparing milk, that's when the harm comes. Yeah. Right. So that's the only time when I would use that formula can be potentially harmful if not prepared properly. Yeah. Right.

SPEAKER_02

And actually, let's And actually, because we're doing an episode on the milk recall, people are gonna sit there going, you can't say that formula is not happen not harmful when you've done an episode on milk recall. Yeah. But it's not like we're saying formula feeding in principle is not harmful once it's prepared appropriately and the food stuff itself is safe.

SPEAKER_01

There has been large-scale studies using sibling analysis to look at the differences. Now, what is sibling analysis? Sibling analysis is when you look at a family that has two children and one child was exposed to the thing that you're interested in, and the other child wasn't purely by chance. It wasn't an experiment. You didn't say to the parents, feed this child formula, feed this child breast milk.

SPEAKER_02

It's like our kids.

SPEAKER_01

Kind of like our kids.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, because our first was exposed to formula and the second was exclusively breast milk.

SPEAKER_01

And if anything, the one exposed to formula is much cleverer than the other one.

SPEAKER_02

Oh stop, that's not true at all. He's clever, he's just heedless. There's a difference.

SPEAKER_01

Well, there you go. See? So so when that happens, right, the benefits of breast milk or the differences in outcomes between breast milk and formula reduce significantly. They're still there, but the signal attenuates.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. So there's huge if you're raised in the same household with from the same genetic pool.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. So that tells you that other factors play an equally important role in how a child develops.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And again, I'm not playing down the benefits of breast milk, but what I'm saying it is just one aspect of how children turn out.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, 100%.

SPEAKER_01

And the one thing I say to all the families that are riddled with guilt if they cannot breastfeed, if for some reason family circumstances, life, whatever, decide to introduce formula or wean away from breast milk onto formula and their kids are still relatively young. I will say to them your 18-year-old child will be exactly the same, regardless of what decision you make right now about feeding.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Right? And that's for that individual family, that is true.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Right? A lot of the time when we look at these things, they are on a population level.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, you see, it comes down to like WHO, it's a world health organization. Yeah. And there's massive differences across countries, across cultures, across populations, across races, across so many things. Yeah. But what they have to do is issue in very, very broad strokes.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And so I hope that makes people feel a little bit better. One thing we didn't cover that I really want to cover is we spoke about how the real harm in terms of formula comes from unsafe prep.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, so let's talk about that.

SPEAKER_01

And also the shame-based messaging that makes parents terrified to feed their baby, right? That's one of the harms. Because if you are so scared of giving your baby formula and they're not gaining weight, like I've had families and they come to me at six weeks of age and they're less than their birth weight, the baby. At six weeks.

SPEAKER_02

At six weeks.

SPEAKER_01

Because they're so afraid of giving formula.

SPEAKER_02

Like we've talked about this at two weeks, which is different. Yes. But at six weeks.

SPEAKER_01

And they still they still haven't regained their birth weight. Yeah. Because that's far worse for a baby than being given a bottle. Not that giving a bottle is bad.

SPEAKER_03

No.

SPEAKER_01

But you know, I'm just trying to sort of orient it. Let's talk about milk prep. Milk prep, let's admit it, is a pain in the hole.

SPEAKER_02

Oh my god, the best thing about breastfeeding was just being able to throw my son on mute as soon as he cried. Yes. And not have to drag myself out of bed and down and start boiling a kettle and heating things up.

SPEAKER_01

And waiting.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, with a screaming child in your arms. Oh, that was stressful. That bit, that bit I found hard.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So let me bring you down. Let me bring you. Ask or ask me what are the principles of safe milk about.

SPEAKER_02

So it's been a while, Afife, since I have prepped any bottles. So remind me again, I'm gonna get you to go through this bit because I've forgotten.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. So there are some basic things that you need to adhere to. And I get a lot of questions about can I use this, can I use that, can I use the other?

SPEAKER_03

Right?

SPEAKER_01

They need to adhere to these things.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

You have to boil freshly poured water to 100 degrees.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Why? Because that sterilizes the water.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. Has to reach 100.

SPEAKER_02

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

Then you have to wait for the water to go down to 70 degrees.

SPEAKER_03

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Because that is the sweet spot for formula to mix the powder in the water that ensures that the milk is sterilized from any potential bacteria that may be present there while maintaining nutritional integrity. That is the key thing. Right?

SPEAKER_02

You know what I'm going to start asking you.

SPEAKER_01

And then you wait, or then you can cool the formula down to a reasonable temperature after that.

SPEAKER_02

So that's a long time. It is a long time, right? So how far in advance can you prep these bottles?

SPEAKER_01

Okay, we'll talk about that in a minute. Okay. Some people ask me, can I not mix the powder at 100 degrees? The answer is ideally no. You may disrupt the nutritional integrity of the milk.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Right? Can I just heat the water to 70 and mix it then? Why do I have to go to 100? Because it's not sterilized. It doesn't sterilize the water.

SPEAKER_02

The water, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. So those are the basic principles. After you mix, you cool it down to a reasonable temperature for the baby. Right?

SPEAKER_02

Can powder be added at less than 70 degrees?

SPEAKER_01

No, because less than 70 doesn't clean the powder if that may have potential bacteria in it.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, so the water has to go to 100, cool down to 70. The powder is to go in at about 70 degrees. Yes. You mix the bottle and then you let that cool down to a temperature that won't scald your child.

SPEAKER_01

Some people ask, can I not boil the water, wait for it to cool down, and then mix it when it's completely.

SPEAKER_02

That's what I was about to ask you.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. That is not the advice.

SPEAKER_02

So it doesn't because it doesn't sterilize the powder.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, no. Most powder is clean. So if you do this, you will get away with it most of the time. But the key here, you're dealing with small babies that could get it, you know, unwell very quickly.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Now I'm sure we can we did that. Yeah, I'm sure we did that a lot, right?

SPEAKER_02

So we used to cool. Okay, this is what I did, confession time. And I would say there's a lot of mothers out there that do this. Yes. Right? That you sterilize your bottles, you have your boiling water, you fill the bottles to the amount of ounces of water that you're going to be given the baby, you cover them, you let them cool down. Okay. Right? You don't recheck the temperature to make sure it's 70 degrees.

SPEAKER_04

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And you add the powder and mix it when you're going to be giving it to the baby. And potentially warm up the bottle a little bit to a warm temperature if you have a very fussy child like I had, who would only drink milk at a specific temperature.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So that is not adhering to the advice. I think that's what most people do. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And thankfully, because they are such stringent measure like there's such uh stringent um preparation of powder measures like in in the packaging before it reaches your shelf.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, but you have to remember once you open the 800 gram tin, it's exposed.

SPEAKER_02

This is it. But that's but that's why you need the 70 degrees. That's why you need to do it, got it.

SPEAKER_01

Now, okay, milk prep machines don't adhere to this.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, okay, right.

SPEAKER_01

Um, you can batch prepare. So you can heat the water, boil the water to 100, wait for it to reach 70, then make several bottles. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, so you can make your four or five bottles for the day.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, and then put them in the fridge and you can use them within 24 hours.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, can you warm them?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, for the baby to feed, but then they have to feed straight away.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, so yeah. So you can warm them to the point, whatever degrees that you you know that your baby is happy with, and then they drink that bottle straight away. Okay, so rather than just cooling the water and then adding the milk the milk powder later, you need to add it at 70 degrees and then let it cool and warm it. Okay, grand. So the order is slightly different than when I would zoom when we had, but I'd just like to say both the children are alive.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, and you are a bad mother.

SPEAKER_02

Just remember every I say that every week.

SPEAKER_01

So, guys, we hope you enjoyed this episode. I just want to do a bit of a recap.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, go on, hit me.

SPEAKER_01

Before the recap, though, please subscribe and listen to Baby Tribe Plus or Baby Tribe Shorts.

SPEAKER_02

Baby Tribe Shorts.

SPEAKER_01

Baby Tribe Shorts. We we that's where the real spice lives. And um we're we're gonna we're talking about a lot of papers, we're debunking a lot of issues, and we're gonna be answering your questions. So we're gonna be like agony rants. No, sorry, that's a different podcast. Agony ants, agony ants, sorry, girl, sorry, Neve.

SPEAKER_02

I love it. Headstuff will be happy, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So breast milk has real benefits, that is true, and we don't need to whisper it, right?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, that's fine.

SPEAKER_01

Formula is not harmful, and that is also true. Recosts can be scary, especially when it's baby food, but they're very rare, they're batch specific, and they usually mean that the safety system has worked exactly as it should. So check the batch, follow the official advice, don't let social media turn safety alerts into a horror movie because that is happening, and I really don't like it. Switching formula brands for most healthy babies is usually fine. And also, if you have a prescribed formula, check with your healthcare provider.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, definitely.

SPEAKER_01

And if you're feeding your baby with formula combination feeding express milk or donor milk or breastfeeding directly, you're not gambling with their future, you're feeding them. Yeah, that's the job. And if this episode helps, please share it with a parent who's currently standing in the supermarket aisle reading tins like they're diffusing a bomb. I know.

SPEAKER_02

Like we're like, this is not a big drama, it's fine. And then he finishes with like they're diffusing a bomb.

SPEAKER_01

You're doing better than you think. Thank you for listening to The Baby Tribe.

SPEAKER_02

You're all doing better than you think.

SPEAKER_01

The Baby Tribe is proudly sponsored by happy tummy.ie, the exclusive distributor of Bayagaya probiotics, providing support for gut and oral health for the whole family.

SPEAKER_00

This show is part of the Headstuff Podcast Network, a hub for the creative and the curious. Shows are produced in association with Headstuff and the Podcast Studios Dublin. Find out more or become a member at Headstuff Podcasts.com.