17 answers

It Seems like My Baby Is Hardly Drinking.

I have a baby who is almost one year. She is on the smaller side. At 10 months the doctor was worried about her weight and wanted me to put her on formula instead of breastfeeding. I tried giving her some formula, but she hardly drank a drop. So I kept up with the breastfeeding, although she's now weaned to only one feeding a day (her nursing times kept getting shorter and shorter). Anyway, I now offer her milk, or yogurt drinks, etc., sevral times a day and she drinks very little. Does anyone know how much is "normal" for a one-year-old to be drinking? I'm not too worried, as she still has at least 6 wet diapers a day and has no problem with tear production. But she is definitely smaller than the average 1-year-old (probably 16-17 pounds). Any advice is appreciated!

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you so much for your advice. It kind of confirms my mother instict, which is that she will be just fine, and that as long as she contiues to grow and thrive and eat a good deal of fruits and veggies, she will be fine. Thank you!!!

More Answers

My son has always been small, 5th and 10th % for weight. I can count the number of time he drank more than 5 oz. at a feeding on 1 hand. We kept up the breastmilk until his 1 yr birthday and then switched to a sippy cup with whole milk. He adjusted just fine.

I would suggest a vitamin supplement and if you are super worried you can get the nutiritional drinks to give her. We did that for my son when we got a little concerned about his weight. He drank those in place of milk. They are flavored, but have the vitamin smell to them. He liked them just fine. I'm glad he's off though. They are way more expensive than milk. You could supplement 1 of them a day for the milk and see how it goes.

Check with your peditrician to make sure it's okay that young.

Good luck. Don't worry too much see will come around.

With both of my kids as they got closer to one, the didn't drink as much milk because they were already eating more solid foods. Are you giving her enough solid food? I gave my kids as babies bananas (scrape the banana and only give the white part and not the seedy part of the banana) boiled carrots then mashed them, mashed apples, etc. and they always had a healthy weight. Hopefully this will help. Good luck.

Since you breastfed, there is no reason to give her cows milk. Cows milk should only be consumed by cows. Milk has been shown to leach calcium (before you protest, do the research) as well as puts a high sugar / fat load on the body. That could set her up for weight problems later in life.

That said, bio-active yogurt is fantastic for her! Just make sure that it's not one of the sugary ones and that there are active cultures in the yogurt. In fact, all human females should consume yogurt regularly. It supports immune function as well as bowel function.

Each human should drink 1/2 their body weight of WATER (in ounces) per day. That's not much volume for a small child.

Also, I saw several fruit juice recommendations. I strongly object on several levels: 1) too much sugar (and yes, high fructose corn syrup IS BAD FOR YOU), 2) the acid level can be hard on baby, and 3) depending on the juice, she could be getting 4x RDA or 1/2 RDA. Real fruit is much better.

check out this link about vitamin d supplements

http://www.shaklee.net/healthydesire/product/20057

because nursing gave her calcium but not very much vitamin d just take a look at that link and read the info if you have any other questions let me know

What a lot doctors these days will tell a mom (and LLL supports this advice) is to *supplement with expressed milk.* This doctor needs a copy of a LLL book, to educate him about the benefits of breastfeeding. La Leche League is recognized by the World Health Organization and the American Academy of Pediatrics as the foremost authority on anything breastfeeding related.

Judging by her 6+ wet dipes a day, she's hydrated enough.
As for milk, yogurt, etc....It could very well be that her little body is not ready for cow milk. Is there a history at all of dairy sensitivity in your family? There's no dairy stuff in my family (or dh's), but neither of my kids wanted much to do with cow dairy until closer to 15mos.
As alternatives, we did goat's milk, rice milk, and -- after 12mos of age - almond milk.

Since you're in good ol' Texas, keep her water handy at all times. Especially this summer.
As she gets older, one idea is to get a fun 'new' sippy or bottle (not nipple, think sigg or kanteen) -- one that has fun animals or designs on it. It's possible that she's a bit young to care, but it's a thought.

HTH
K., mama to
Catherine, 5y
Samuel, 2y
EDD 9/09

My guy just turned one and has three 6 ounce bottles during the day and one 4 ounce bottle at night. He is also getting juice twice a day in a sippy cup. I water down the juice a lot. He gets more flavored water than juice :)

Try different liquids and different containers. It might be she might need the bottle a little longer or a different bottle.

Have you tried chocolate milk? That's what I give my son, who is not a big fan of milk he'll only drink chocolate, I also give string cheese, yogurt drinks, and a calcium supplement. Grilled cheese sandwiches, there is also bread fortified with calcium, and orange juice(although I would watch for diaper rash) When I weaned my son and put him on cow's milk I had to add cereal and some splenda to his milk and he loved it. I assume you are talking about drinking milk. As far as juice I limit that but he always has a sippy cup with water available.

My daughter was always tiny and she absolutely refused to drink milk from a sippy when I made the switch. It was several weeks before she gave in and in that time I worried that she wasn't getting enough, but she eventually came around. I wouldn't worry about her size. My daughter was 16.5 lbs. at 10 months old also. She is now 3 and is still small for her age, but is perfectly healthy. I would just try a few different kinds of cups (maybe one with a straw) to see if she drinks any more for you. I actually had to let my daughter drink milk from a regular cup and just help her pour it into her mouth. This was the only way I could get any milk into her for at least a couple of weeks. It was really messy, but did the trick, so you could try that too. Good luck and don't worry....good things come in small packages! That's what my Mom always told me since I was tiny too!

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