Current Paediatrics
Volume 16, Issue 5 , Pages 342-347, October 2006

The emergence of our modern understanding of infant nutrition and feeding 1750–1900

Department of Child Health, Division of Developmental Medicine, University of Glasgow, Yorkhill Hospitals, Glasgow G3 8SJ, UK

Summary 

Our modern understanding of infant nutrition and feeding arose out of a constellation of scientific discoveries made more than a 100 years ago. With the emergence of chemistry and physiology in the late 18th century, the analysis of foods, metabolic and energy balance studies, calorimetry, cell theory and measurements of growth and digestive function, became integrated to provide a coherent model of how organisms grow and are nourished. The interaction, with clinicians and public health professionals, of those working in these ‘new’ areas of the biological science, led to the testing and application of safe and effective ways of feeding babies, in the face of, and in response to, high infant mortality and morbidity.

Keywords: Nutrition, Feeding, Milk, Infant, History, Metabolism, Growth

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PII: S0957-5839(06)00081-9

doi:10.1016/j.cupe.2006.07.005

Current Paediatrics
Volume 16, Issue 5 , Pages 342-347, October 2006