Strollerderby

Mozart Makes Babies Smarter and Other Medical Myths

Posted by Amy Kuras

 We’ve all heard them – those medical myths that we all believe, even though we don’t have any basis for them.

This article in USA Today examines some of those myths, plus has a nifty little quiz that I scored so badly on, it appears my children are lucky to be alive.

Here’s one fact I really like: That larger-headed babies are smarter. I clicked no, but it turns out? They do in fact score higher on intelligence tests. I should have known, because my daughter has an enormous head and is also clearly a supergenius.

Here are some other ones – there’s no clinical evidence that sugar makes kids any more hyper (these researchers clearly have not seen my kids after a birthday party or visit to the grandparents’), and teething doesn’t cause a fever. And playing Mozart for babies does not make them smarter — sorry, all you suckers who fell for the belly headphones. That belief comes from a study that was done on college students, the effect only lasted fifteen minutes and it’s never been able to be replicated.

And of course for many of these myths, they come courtesy of the pediatrician. Many of the long held beliefs about what you should and shouldn’t do have never been clinically tested in any sort of rigorous study, so doctors fall back on what their mentors told them whether it’s true or not.

Basically, if you question something the doctor is telling you (or your aunt or best friend or coworker, for that matter) it’s okay to ask them where they got their data. Or, do what I do – smile, thank them, and ignore.


+ DIGG + STUMBLE

Comments

 

Ticktock said:

The reason your kids are more hyper after a birthday party or seeing grandparents is because they just went to a really fun birthday party or they were excited to see extended family. That's the reason the myth is so widespread because exciting events are usually accompanied by sugary foods.

May 27, 2009 9:09 PM
 

CV said:

If its a myth that antibiotics bugger up BCP, why does the insert state something to that effect?

May 28, 2009 7:15 AM
 

ZMama said:

Just because you can't get toddlers to go nuts on sugar in some lab doesn't prove to me that my daughter didn't get totally hopped up on sugar from a giant jam sandwich last Saturday am (no birthday party or grandparents in sight).

May 28, 2009 5:03 PM
 

Teo said:

ZMama - maybe because your daughter had a good day (we all have good hyper moments once in a while) that does not prove it was the jelly sanwich.. she'd probably be as hyper if you gave her anything else for that matter.

May 30, 2009 4:15 PM

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