Alicia Silverstone Word-of-Mouth to Bear The Son of Blu: When feeding their children, parents will chop, dice and puree foods to make them easier to eat. But most stop to chew food and spit it into his mouth to his children.
Do not Alicia Silverstone. The actress has posted a video on his blog "Life Nature" on Friday for a chick to feed the 11-month-old son Bear Blu.
"I feed the bears and mochi ... a little bit of vegetable soup out of my mouth it. This is his favorite ... and mine," she writes. "He literally crawl across the room to attack my mouth when I eat. This video was taken about a month or two ago, when he was a little shaky. Now it is in my mouth to get food!"
Although Silverstone word-of-mouth may be asked to staff "EWW" all over the Internet, practice, premastication technically called, is not uncommon for mothers and children around the world. Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University, said that may not be as unhealthy as it sounds.
"For the classical germs, it's not a big problem. When we kiss our children, we all have bugs that live in our mouths can be transmitted to the child," said Schaffner.
However, Schaffner said the practice is dangerous, if the mother's infection such as hepatitis B, which can be transmitted to the child. In fact, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns specifically of mothers with hepatitis B, are not pre-chew food for their children.
Keith Ayoob, associate professor of pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, said pre-chew, not what he would recommend that children should learn from their normal eating habits Parents.
"It falls into the category of higher and higher parent. Child should learn to chew," said Ayub. "List of reasons not to do it a mile."
Do not Alicia Silverstone. The actress has posted a video on his blog "Life Nature" on Friday for a chick to feed the 11-month-old son Bear Blu.
"I feed the bears and mochi ... a little bit of vegetable soup out of my mouth it. This is his favorite ... and mine," she writes. "He literally crawl across the room to attack my mouth when I eat. This video was taken about a month or two ago, when he was a little shaky. Now it is in my mouth to get food!"
Although Silverstone word-of-mouth may be asked to staff "EWW" all over the Internet, practice, premastication technically called, is not uncommon for mothers and children around the world. Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University, said that may not be as unhealthy as it sounds.
"For the classical germs, it's not a big problem. When we kiss our children, we all have bugs that live in our mouths can be transmitted to the child," said Schaffner.
However, Schaffner said the practice is dangerous, if the mother's infection such as hepatitis B, which can be transmitted to the child. In fact, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns specifically of mothers with hepatitis B, are not pre-chew food for their children.
Keith Ayoob, associate professor of pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, said pre-chew, not what he would recommend that children should learn from their normal eating habits Parents.
"It falls into the category of higher and higher parent. Child should learn to chew," said Ayub. "List of reasons not to do it a mile."
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