cover image What to Feed Your Baby: 
Cost-Conscious Nutrition for Your Infant

What to Feed Your Baby: Cost-Conscious Nutrition for Your Infant

Stanley A. Cohen, M.D. Rowman & Littlefield, $17.95 trade paper (256p) ISBN 978-1-4422-1920-5

Based on a book that celebrated pediatric gastroenterologist Cohen wrote 30 years ago (Healthy Babies, Healthy Kids), this fact-packed resource, featuring numerous flow charts and tables (about vitamins, commercial formula comparisons, infant-growth rates, and scads of other data), covers recent and traditional pediatric nutritional science in 16 concise chapters structured in a question-and-answer format, and a thorough appendix. The author’s philosophy is reassuring: “The entire concept of parenthood is based on nourishing and nurturing your children during every aspect of their development.” An advocate of breast-feeding whose children and grandchildren were nursed, yet received supplemental formula, Cohen has also consulted with most major formula manufacturers. Breast may not be best for all mothers and babies, and chapters cover topics ranging from allergies, colic, normal weight, pooping, prematurity, and essential nutrients to timing the introduction of solid food and toddler dietary recommendations for breast- and bottle-fed infants. As an experienced doctor, Cohen has seen it all, but except for some old-fashioned wisdom found in his excellent anecdotes about babies he has successfully treated, and the helpful summary of information at each chapter’s conclusion, this volume contains more algorithms than accessible mommy-friendly advice. (July)