S.G. asks from Redmond, WA on April 23, 2009
5 Month Old Does Not Accept Bottle
Hi All,
My nearly 5 month old son exclusively breastfed till 3 months. After that i have been trying getting him onto bottle with no success so far. Have tried lots of bottles and nipples like Dr. Browns, Avent, Playtex, First years, MAM etc. I am thinking of buying Nuby nurser after reading reviews about it on internet. Has anybody had any success with Nuby? Any suggestions are welcome.
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J.C. answers from Anchorage on April 24, 2009
Have someone else do bottles at first, and if you are introducing formula, try mixing it half and half with breast milk to introduce the taste more slowly. I also used both breast feeding and bottle feeding, and it worked great for us! You just have to get him used to the 2 different feels and tastes.
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R.S. answers from Portland on April 24, 2009
Hi S.,
My son refused a bottle around 5 months also. He took it a couple of times when he was 4 months but decided he didn't like it at all around 5 months. I tried many different bottles, although since I still nursed wasn't stressed about it. Around 6 months (when he was able to sit up) I decided to try a sippy cup with a silicon top, so its softer, like a bottle nipple, he loved it and after a month or so switched to a normal sippy cup. I got this at Target, I believe the brand is NUK. This was also what I used for my older son when I was trying to train him to use a sippy cup.
Just thought I would share my experience in case it might be helpful, good luck!
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S.L. answers from Portland on April 24, 2009
Hi,
He's old enough to drink out of a cup (with help, of course) or a sippy cup. He might not feel like he's being "tricked" by the wrong nipple this way.
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J.C. answers from Seattle on April 24, 2009
It's hard, I know -- some people find babies will accept a cup better than a bottle--- worth a try --
Blessings,
J.
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J.C. answers from Anchorage on April 24, 2009
Have someone else do bottles at first, and if you are introducing formula, try mixing it half and half with breast milk to introduce the taste more slowly. I also used both breast feeding and bottle feeding, and it worked great for us! You just have to get him used to the 2 different feels and tastes.
1 mom found this helpful
L.T. answers from Seattle on April 24, 2009
We made the mistake of not trying till 3 months as well and it took forever to get our son to take a bottle. What finally worked was alot patience and trying over and over. I had to leave the premises and we bought faster flow nipples (try #2s or 3s). Having Dad walk around the room with our son facing away from him helped as well. We read it somewhere....
Best of luck! Remember that once he takes it you need to make sure to feed him from a bottle at least once a week so he remembers how. We made that mistake too! :)
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E.J. answers from Seattle on April 24, 2009
Oh this can be such a hard struggle - my main advice is just to stick with it - your baby will eat from the bottle if hungry enough - they won't let themselves starve. It is probably better to have someone other than you give the bottle and if possible leave the area or the house all together so your baby realizes that this is the only choice. Other people have had success with the feeder holding a shirt that smells like mom or holding the baby skin to skin. We finally had success with the Nuk bottle (available at Walmart) but I don't know if it was the bottle or our son finally just accepted the fact that he was hungry and needed to eat. Don't just nurse him if he won't take the bottle though all that teaches his is that if he cries long enough he will get what he wants. I know it is tough but Hang in there, your baby will get it.
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S.W. answers from Seattle on April 24, 2009
I'm not trying to be negative, but my daughter never took the bottle. She was breastfed exclusively and refused the bottle. She also never took a pacifier. I think she was trying to warm me that she will be a challenge from here on out! Anyway, she would drink from a regular cup and a sippy cup. You may try this if it is really important to get him off the breast. I also tried every bottle out there and just ended up with a collection of never used bottles. Good Luck!
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J.W. answers from Seattle on April 24, 2009
Babies like what they like. I would try having someone else give him the bottle, like your husband or a babysitter. It natural for him to want to nurse. There's a whole mother and child connection going on. I would use expressed breast milk in the bottle. You're throwing too much change otherwise. If at all possible, I would continue breast feeding for as long as you can. It's good for him and for you. But if work schedules or other concerns come into play, having someone else who will be feeding him in your absence be the bottle giver will work out better. You could still nurse when you get home from work, it will help keep your supply ample enough for him.
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