Can certain foods i am eating make my breastfed baby gassy?
It’s a wives’ tale. People will tell you differently because they ate broccoli (or whatever) and their baby fussed, but…babies fuss all the time, and plenty of mothers eat broccoli. If women had never heard the wives’ tales, they would never think to blame the broccoli. But since they have — “Placebo effect is the term applied by medical science to the therapeutic and healing effects of inert medicines and/or ritualistic or faith healing practices.[1][2] When referring to medicines, placebo is a preparation which is pharmacologically inert but which may have a therapeutic effect based solely on the power of suggestion. It may be administered in any of the ways in which pharmaceutical products are administered.[3] Sometimes known as non-specific effects or subject-expectancy effects, a so-called placebo effect (or its counterpart, the nocebo effect), occurs when a patient’s symptoms are altered in some way (i.e., alleviated or exacerbated) by an otherwise inert treatment, due to the