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DARE TO ASK: Is lifting kids by the arms a racial issue?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why do African-American women pick up their babies by one arm? Are they aware they can dislocate the shoulder?

Becky, Jacksonville

Replies

I hate anyone picking up a young child like that, and I do not pay attention to the race of the offender. My mother has always said the same thing: she hates to see that, too.

Moni, black, Fort Myers

I’ve seen women of many different cultures do this. I am guilty of it. I have 20-month-old triplet cousins, and when I’m caring for them and two want to be picked up and you’re trying to get things done, I swing them up on my hip. I’ve never done it to an infant because you can hurt them, but toddlers are more “durable.”

Asia D., 21, black, Phoenix

The black females you’ve seen doing this are usually the single, very young, untrained “baby’s mommas” who are too ignorant of proper child care or too stubborn to learn. By the way, I’ve seen this done by black and white single mothers.

Brad, black, Winchester, Va.

Experts say

Rest assured the country isn’t crawling with kids in pain as you read this because their moms yanked on their arms and dislocated their shoulders.

Subluxated their elbows, sure. But dislocated their shoulders? Nah.

“It’s called nursemaid’s elbow,” said Denise Dowd, chief of injury prevention at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. “You can pull the bone out of place. You’ll know something’s wrong because the kid will not use the arm – it’ll hang there.”

Such a partial dislocation, mostly caused by someone tugging hard on or pulling the child up by one arm, usually has to be put back in place in the emergency room.

“We twist the arm back in. There’s no medication. We see it hundreds of times a year.”

It’s not restricted to African-American kids, she said.

“It can happen to anyone; pediatricians don’t typically teach parents about it.”

Wilma Ann Anderson’s point, exactly.

The publisher of Mahogany Baby Web-zine for black parents, and a mother of four, Anderson says lack of education is the likely culprit when parents err with their offspring.

“I don’t see it as an African-American thing. Folks in general do what they know. If you haven’t been introduced to new ways of doing things” (such as not subluxating an elbow, we presume) “then it’s very uncommon you would start implementing these things.”

Black parents do tend to discipline more harshly than white parents, she said, but it varies from person to person.

“It’s been a theme passed down for generations among black families, and it’s biblically based . . . that it’s OK to be physical with the child when reprimanding. But many black families are going against that, using the white mom ‘timeout’ system – which I personally thought I never would use, but I said ‘Hey, let me give it a try.’ You implement what works.”

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