23 answers

Help, My Baby Won't Take a Bottle - Seattle,WA

I am going back to work in 3 weeks and my son, who is 8 weeks old, will not take a bottle. I have tried Born Free, Playtex and Medela bottles and he just cries when I try to feed him with them. I have also tried to have other people feed him while I am out of the room. Please help!

2 moms found this helpful

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

hi K.,

I had the same problem with my daughter. We just kept practicing a little bit every day. Then when she went to day care they just kept trying over and over again a couple times aday. The first week or so she didn't eat very much, but once she adjusted she started taking it no problems. I was really worried too but I found what they say it true. If they are really hungry they will eat. Hang in there!

1 mom found this helpful

Try Dr. Brown's bottles. They're the absolute best, the most like real breast feeding. I cannot stress enough how great they are. We tried everything else and then finally tried Dr. Browns and it worked. We had to go to glass when the whole "bad plastic" thing happened, but I think they have good plastic ones now too. My daughter was the same way but she took to Dr. Brown's a lot more quickly. Hang in there. He'll take to it eventually, when he's hungry enough, he just knows that he likes you best :) PS - Don't feel like 3 weeks is the deadline to have this process tied up w/ a neat bow. It will be a work-in-process and he'll accept the bottle when he's ready or when he's hungry enough.

More Answers

I got my daughter to take a bottle by putting her in a football hold and I would start to nurse. right after she got sucking I would slip the bottle nipple in her mouth... I also put breast milk on the nipple and warmed it up. Good luck with your new little one.

1 mom found this helpful

There is a bottle called Adiri (I think that's the spelling). It actually looks like, well, a boob! My hubby called me at work and actually said, "Where's the torpedo boob?" It's long like a bottle, but shaped like a breast and nipple. It's spendy (about $12 for one bottle if I remember correctly), but worth it if it works! They sell them at Babies R Us. He will catch on... They all do eventually. Hang in there!

1 mom found this helpful

hi K.,

I had the same problem with my daughter. We just kept practicing a little bit every day. Then when she went to day care they just kept trying over and over again a couple times aday. The first week or so she didn't eat very much, but once she adjusted she started taking it no problems. I was really worried too but I found what they say it true. If they are really hungry they will eat. Hang in there!

1 mom found this helpful

I had the same challenge -- my daughter is now 7 months old -- and worked with the folks at the occupaional therapy department at Children's Hospital to work through it.

In short, what they told me was three things:
1) the goal while you are working is to get enough milk in him so that he doesn't dehydrate. your doc or a lactation consultant if you're nursing can tell you what to aim for. my daughter was 20 weeks when i went back to work and our goal was 6 ounces in the 8 hours i was at work -- so not a lot, just to give you perspective. don't stress is he is isn't taking what he would normally take from you during that time.

2) that said, expect him to reverse-cycle when you are back together -- in other words, nurse more once non-bottle food is available. for me, it meant that my daughter who was on a every three hours schedule for nursing before i went back went to nursing every 2 hours for a while. she was just making up the amount she needed to given how little she was eating during the day.

as the OT explained it to me -- think of your son "sleeping through the night but during the day" -- he can go longer stretches, it's just that he's going to do that while you're at work.

the downside is that you will get less sleep.

3 the last thing they told me -- and this ultimately worked -- was to work with different delivery mechanisms - not just a botte. P would drink from a spoon or a small (shot glass, really) cup in very very small amounts. when she got older we took her to a sippy cup at about 6 months.

lastly, the daycare people helped immensely -- the same two people gave her a bottle every day and were incredibly patient. now, at almost 8 months, she will take a bottle from those two (we're up to about 14 oz a day now -- yay!) but still no one else, including me or my husband.

so -- three pieces of advice:
1) aim for minimal amt of fluid during the day
2) allow him to reverse cycle
3) try different delivery mechanisms but keep the people consistent, if you can.

GOOD LUCK -- I know it's stressful on you. I cried and cried and cried and worried, but the options that the OT gave me helped us find a solution that worked for us.

And if all else fails, ask your doctor to give you a recommendation to Children's Hospital for an evaluation if your insurance will cover it.

Keeping my fingers crossed for you.

L.

I breast fed both of my children for ten months they would not take any bottle except the Dr. Browns not sure why, i pumped when i couldn't feed them- but they would only use the Dr, Brown. Great bottle the only thing was that they leaked if placeed on the sides. Had to sit up right or upside down. Weird. If your baby takes a binky try to find a similar nipple that may work also my children did not take a binky untill i stopped breast feeding. the nipple they chose was just a standard Dr Brown nipple. ( and i tried everyone i could find to bye- untill i found Dr. Brown.

Try enlarging the hole in the nipple or adding another smaller hole along side the original. It's hard for some babies to make the transistion, but to persist is to achieve. Are you continuing to pump once you return to work or are you going to switch to formula? If you're using formula, that could be part of the problems as well. But try an additional hole in the nipple so he doesn't have to work so hard when sucks. His latch on the nipple may be uncomfortable, so try to find a supple latex/rubber. Best of luck!!

Have you tried warming up the milk in the bottle? That is what finally worked for my son.

You may need to make sure that the bottle is not getting clogged. When my daughter cried like that it was often because the bottle was clogged or the nipple wasn't working right. I mostly breastfed, but towards the end of breastfeeding my daughter used the bottle more and this would happen. My husband thought I was going crazy one time when he saw me sucking on the formula bottle until I told him what I was doing. Then, he realized why she was crying so much when he fed her. The poor little baby would have starved if I didn't figure this out. I'd really try to find the cause for the crying, if possible.

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