Falling Off the Growth Curve: An Underrecognized Risk of Automated Formula Machines
Evan S Baker, Neemesh Desai, Lucas McKnight

TL;DR
A baby's weight loss was caused by improperly concentrated formula from an automated machine, highlighting the need for careful formula preparation checks.
Contribution
Identifies improper formula concentration via automated machines as an underrecognized cause of growth faltering in infants.
Findings
A four-month-old infant's weight dropped due to under-concentrated formula from an automated machine.
Manual fortification of the formula led to improved weight gain and recovery.
Physicians should assess formula preparation methods, including automated machine settings, in growth faltering cases.
Abstract
Growth faltering, falling off the growth curve, or failure to thrive are all common terms used to describe a frequent but clinically important scenario routinely seen in pediatrics, often identified during infancy and other periods of rapid growth. Inadequate intake is the most common cause identified, especially in the neonatal period. This can lead to lasting consequences for cognitive potential and final adult height. We present the case of a four-month-old female infant who experienced a sudden decline from the 13.6th to the 4.6th percentile in weight for age between six weeks of age and her four-month well visit. Parents reported an adequate intake volume of 32 oz/day prepared with an automated formula machine and age-appropriate elimination. A careful nutrition history regarding formula preparation revealed that the machine was set to a concentration significantly lower than…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpreadsheets and End-User Computing · Psychometric Methodologies and Testing · AI in Service Interactions
