L.L. asks from Aliso Viejo, CA on April 18, 2008
Bottle Feeding Advice
Hi, I have a 3 month old boy. we have been doing a combo breastfeeding/formula up until 2 months and a half... Now suddenly as I go back to work, he is refusing to take a bottle. Even bottled breastmilk causes a crying fit. everyone keeps sayin that when he's hungry he will eat, but now he skips feedings and sleeps through them. which has now caused his day and night to be flipped.
So What Happened?™
thank you so much for all the advice.. i have moved the frozen breastmilk to the back of the fridge. I have been coming home during work to breastfeed my little one, because I can and I love him so much. and I have been battling the bottle feeding at night. after two nights... he finally took 3 oz after 4 hours. I hope he is not dehydrated... that email kinda scared me. I will try to keep him hydrated. um.. overall I am overwhelmed by all the great advice. I am guessing that rather than his feeding being 3 hours apart.. they are now approaching 4 hours apart. I am guessing this is okay. thanks again everyone.
Featured Answers
J.G. answers from Los Angeles on April 19, 2008
Hello L., I had a similar problem. I breastfeed exclusivly, but a few days a month I go in to work. On the days I worked my mother reported his feedings drastically dropped, and he would gag on the bottle. I bought the AVENT breast-to-bottle transition bottle. The nipple is designed specifically for nipple confusion. It's a bit pricey at $5 a bottle but it works like a charm.
More Answers
M.B. answers from Las Vegas on April 21, 2008
It sounds like your son is reverse cycling so he can breastfeed. Here is a link from Kellymom.com that might be helpful. http://www.kellymom.com/bf/normal/reverse-cycling.html
Good luck!!
T. answers from Las Vegas on April 21, 2008
L.,
My biggest advice is patience, patience, patience. Going back to work is hard on both of you. You just have to have your caregiver keep offering the bottle and be patient. I know it is tough. *sigh* as if going back to work wasn't stressfule enough! I went through this with my first child. Fortunately my second was a mellower kind of a child.
:-)T.
M.W. answers from Los Angeles on April 19, 2008
Okay... I will be the crazy one to say it..
Why aren't you staying home? If there is any way you can do it, please do. Even at this young age, he understands that he is supposed to be breastfed. I'm sorry, but as politically incorrect as it is, I just have to point out that you have mammary glands for a reason.
M.M. answers from San Diego on April 19, 2008
My daughter did the same thing. She took a bottle once every week, then all of a sudden refused it and only wanted the breast. She threw a fit at the sight of a bottle. Does your son take a pacifier? Sometimes we would try to settle her down by giving her a pacifier and eventually could sneak in a bottle after a small fit. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. I would recommend staying with the bottles/nipples you have been using. If you keep trying new bottles and nipples, he will just get more frustrated. If you know he will (or would) take one, stay with it and keep trying. I made my husband do the bottle feeding since my daughter knew she could get the breast from me. He eventually made a break through after many frustrating attempts. Then we gave her at least one bottle a day (we still do that and she is 6 months old now) to keep her used to it. Good luck!
J.G. answers from Los Angeles on April 19, 2008
Hello L., I had a similar problem. I breastfeed exclusivly, but a few days a month I go in to work. On the days I worked my mother reported his feedings drastically dropped, and he would gag on the bottle. I bought the AVENT breast-to-bottle transition bottle. The nipple is designed specifically for nipple confusion. It's a bit pricey at $5 a bottle but it works like a charm.
A.E. answers from Los Angeles on April 19, 2008
My first question would be, are you the only one trying to feed your baby bottles? It is not unusual for a breastfed baby to refuse a bottle from his mom or to not accept the bottle from someone else if Mom is in the room. That said, there are still some babies relunctant to take the bottle even when Mom isn't around. As an infant teacher, I was always sucessful in getting these infants to drink their bottles, even when others were not sucessful. Here are some tips for whomever will be caring for you infant: 1. make sure the milk is very warm, but not hot. 2. If at all possible, the baby's cheek should be held against the caregiver's chest. She or he, should place their hand around the the ring of the bottle so when the bottle is placed in the baby's mouth, the caregiver's hand touches the baby's face; this simulates the breast touching the face. 3. If there is a song you sing to your baby or something you often say over and over to your baby, the person feeding the baby can say or sing the same thing. In other words, your child's routine should be the same whether bottle or breast feeding. 4. Try different brands of bottles. I personally prefer the Avent bottles for breastfeeding infants. 5. It is very important for the person doing the feeding to stay calm and relaxed no matter how much the baby cries or refuses the bottle. If the adult is relaxed, the baby is more apt to relax and drink.
Feel free to email me if you need any more help.
J.S. answers from Los Angeles on April 19, 2008
L.,
Go on-line and look at the Adiri bottle; it looks like a woman's breast and many babies that have difficulty, often take to this bottle. I don't recommend changing bottles if your little one doesn't like them - that can just add to the nipple confusion that he already is experiencing. You must be patient - so often it is the parent who gives up too quickly - babies have a natural tongue thrust and will naturally push the artificial nipple out. I do not like the avent bottles because the "nipple" part of the bottle is much longer than a natural nipple and the "areola" part is much more narrow than an actual breast. You want to find a bottle that is as close to your breast as possible. The Munchkin nipple, which fits on the avent bottles is a better nipple - as are some of the playtex nipples (that fit on the disposable "drop-in" style bottles). However, I also agree with the woman who stated some concern about dehydration - you must get fluid into this baby. Dehydrated babies sleep a lot - be very careful.
J.
B.B. answers from San Diego on April 19, 2008
I feel for you!! We went through this when my daughter was 10 weeks old for about 3 weeks. She would throw a fit even at the sight of the bottle. For me the biggest help was having my husband or grandma coax her into it when I wasn't in the room. They would have to feed her walking slowly and talking in a soothing voice until she started feeding. (She refused to eat when they were sitting down at first). Also, she would never touch a bottle that came from me. So I commited myself a week or so later to feeding her the bottle. It took hours of screaming and I just refused to give in. It did take all day...but she finally took the bottle and we haven't had the issue since. I hope this helps. I know how hard it is to hear your little one so upset. Also, we did have to go through a couple different bottles to find one she liked. Using the premie/newborn nipples did help too so the flow wasn't too fast. Good luck!
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