H.B. asks from Evansville, IN on January 13, 2008
How Long Should I Use Nursery Water?
My son is nearly 18 months old now. We have always used the Nursery brand water with added flouride to mix with his formula, when he was off formula we used it to dilute his juice. I dont use the tap water because I personally think it is nasty and only drink bottled water myself. For some reason it dawned on me today if I should continue the floride water or switch to distilled. Thanks!
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C.S. answers from Chicago on January 14, 2008
Another scam to make you pay for what is free! I would never use that stuff.
Keep in mind that bottled water is not regulated so you have NO idea what is in there. Whereas public water sources are watched for contaminates.
Chicago tap water is amongst the best in the country. If you want to filter-- Brita is a good plan and will filter out some of the larger particulates.
I would not feed my child fluoride in that level. Very contraversial.
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L.R. answers from Chicago on January 13, 2008
My daughter is three and I still use the fluoridated water. I had used the nursery water, but now I use Ice Mountain for Kids with Fluoride. Not sure if there is a difference, but like you I don't like to drink tap water and I know there is no fluoride in bottled water.
V. answers from Chicago on January 20, 2008
Children can use flouridated water until the age of 8 years old, to strengthen the enamel of their developing teeth. Yes, too much flouride can cause discoloration and mottling of enamel, but not in the amounts regulated in the water. Tap water is fine, or any carbon filter, such as Brita. A super duper, reverse osmosis filter will give you almost the equivalent of distilled water, taking out lead and chlorine, but taking out the flouride as well. And yes, kids do need flouride. Dental decay is the single most common disease kids suffer from, and it's entirely preventable.
V. DiMario DDS
DiMario Dental Services, LLC
S.G. answers from Chicago on January 14, 2008
Get your tap water checked out (some towns are better than others) and also consider a home filter system - everything from a Brita pitcher to a "whole house filter" are available out there.
I would avoid "distilled" water unless there's a need for it to be THAT clear. Distilled water has NO minerals at all, and tastes like absolutely nothing. Even bottled drinking water is purified tap water, with extra minerals added back in for taste. If you want to get the pre-bottled stuff, consider the stuff sold as "drinking water".
Quick tip - most drinking water sold in 16-32 ounce bottles in stores is actually city tap water. Read the labels completely and note the use of the word "municipal" or something similar.
M.A. answers from Chicago on January 14, 2008
It's been some time for me, but I think I asked the Pediatrician when I could take the kids off the nursery water, as the flouride is very important.
Hope this helps,
M.
S.D. answers from Indianapolis on January 14, 2008
It's not that flouride is bad, it that flouride-fortified things like toothpaste have too much for little systems to handle which is why you don't need toothpaste at all or should get special pastes (like Oral B) for babies and toddlers.
As for tap water, I just wanted you to know that almost ALL bottled water is from the tap (even when it says it's spring water) so you are kidding yourself if you think you're getting something better by paying too much for it. You are much better off just getting a Britta Filter pitcher or the kind that goes on the faucet.
There is no reason to use distilled water except in your clothes iron. You can look up the studies on it, Nursary water is no better for your baby than tap or filtered.
I won't argue that many times bottled, filtered, or distilled tastes better, our water is so hard, it tastes like you are drinking out of a hose :( We have a filter pitcher. But I just wanted to make sure you know that it's no better for you, it just tastes better.
Long answer short? Don't continue to over-pay for things like Nursery Water and skip it for this next one. Want to do the best for your baby? Breastfeed. Want to do the next best? Get a filtered pitcher and save yourself at least the cost of water if you are going to pay so much for formula. You can check with your pediatrician, ours agreed, Nursery water is a scam.
T.N. answers from Chicago on January 14, 2008
My daughters are 14 months old and we stopped using Nursery water a few months ago. Now we're using regular tap water, which is great in Chicago. Also, bottled water is really bad for the environment, so we try to stay away from it, unless we really need to (when we're travelling, etc.).
L.F. answers from Evansville on February 19, 2008
I stop giving my children Nursery water at a year old, when they began drinking whole milk.
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