44 answers

Breastfed Baby Refusing to Eat from a Bottle

My baby will be three months old this week and she refuses to take a bottle. This is an issue since I have returned to work and she will not eat while I am gone (up to 8 hours). She was exclusively breastfed from the beginning but we began attempting to introduce the bottle (with pumped breastmilk) around 5 weeks. We have tried seven different nipples (playtex, nuk, soothie, johnson's, nuby, madela, avent), 5 different people (me, hubby, both grandmas, and a good friend), every position known to man, different locations, tried slipping the bottle in during nursing, etc... We have tried when she is asleep, awake, tired, not hungry, a little hungry, extremely hungry, you name it. She has gone as long as 12 hours without taking it so the whole "she will take it if she is hungry enough" thing isn't true. She doesn't always scream when the bottle is tried. Sometimes she just plays with it but she won't latch on and feed. I have resorted to working half days to come home and feed her (I work far from home) but my company won't allow me to do it much longer and I am faced with having to take a leave of absence (unpaid). We are at our wits end...please help.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you to everyone for all of the amazing advice! I never expected such a response. What ended up working best for us was me staying home with my precious daughter. It will be tight financially but, even after trying a lot of your tips, Ayla continued to hold out, wasn't gaining the right amount of weight, and was showing other signs of not getting enough nutrition. I am happy to be home and, in the last week, she has begun gaining weight again! We will continue to pursue her taking the bottle and will use your extremely helpful advice. God bless everyone for their help.

Featured Answers

I see you have plenty of advice, but here some more. I did not breast feed but my girl friend did with her little girl. I know they had to cover the bottle with a wash cloth and she could not be in the siht of the baby when they first started with some bottle feedings.

Good Luck
J.

It takes more time...but you can spoon or even cup feed an infant...just be careful not to put too much into their mouth at one time...and this has the added benifit of allowing them to still breastfeed when they are with you because they don't get lazy about feedings as they will with a bottle.

My son was the same way, fortunately I was able to stay home with him. He would not ever take a bottle or pacifier and would get mad that you even tried. What we found that worked was the sippy cups with straws, or just letting him drink from a cup (while someone else holds the cup).
I know it seems young to start on a sippy cup, but what do you have to lose!

More Answers

All my kiddos refuse the bottle as well until I warmed it, and I mean warm.

My baby has done this same thing and a friend recommended the Adiri bottles. They are more expensive but wonderful! Made to feel closet to a breast for breastfed babies. They are BPA free - no bad plastic and low air so less burping and gas.

They have been really helpful for us and our new, little girl.

Here's a link to the product on the babies r us website.
http://www.toysrus.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2968120

Best wishes

Like my daughter's baby sitter said when that happened with us, when she is hungry, she will eat! She will not starve. Really. Even if she has gone 12 hours, she will eventually eat.

Good Luck!

The same thing happened to me and I had to stop working because my daughter didn't take the bottle... I'm sorry to say this but she won't take the bottle any time soon.

My oldest refused any type of bottle or sippy cup. It wasn't much of an issue because I didn't return to work. early intoduction different nipples etc but nothing worked The experts (La Leche league) say that some babies do change their eating scedule and refuse the bottle even when mom is at work.

La Leche League has a really strong group in Waco. They are so helpful with any questions. here is the website www.lalecheleague.org I am sure they will be able to give you much more information. Your little one will be okay adjusting her scedule to yours.

good luck

Debra

Have you tried heating up the nipple with hot water before feeding? One of my babies refused the bottle and that was the last thing we tried - it worked. I feel for you...been there done all of that myself.

One thing my pediatrician told me is that, although 12 hours seems like an overly long time...the baby will not be starved or damaged at that interval of feeding. She encouraged me to use the "when she gets hungry enough" tactic. It was ME that couldn't go the distance on that one.

Another suggestion...connect with a lactician consultant or the La Leche League here in town. They can be a tremendous help and support for you. Years of experience and advice there.

Good Luck to you, it WILL work out.

Blessings,
V.
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I see you have plenty of advice, but here some more. I did not breast feed but my girl friend did with her little girl. I know they had to cover the bottle with a wash cloth and she could not be in the siht of the baby when they first started with some bottle feedings.

Good Luck
J.

I would STRONGLY recommend that you find a way to stay home with your baby who needs her mom.

If you can't do that or don't want to do that, perhaps you can find childcare closer to your job so that you can take some "smoking break" equivalent and go feed your daughter.

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