M.C. asks from Silverdale, WA on October 10, 2006
Not Getting Enough Formula?
My daughter is 9 months old and went for her checkup and the Dr told us that shes not getting enough formula. She is at the point now where shes only taking a bottle before she naps and at bedtime so shes only getting about 18 oz of formula a day the rest of the time shes eating cereal and fruits and veggies and meats( baby food). I know that in a couple months were supposed to get rid of the bottle and by having to give her more formula thats only going to increase the bottle and im wondering if that will make it harder to get rid of them later. Any suggestions on what to do, I had thought about just putting a scoop of her formula in her cereals, I dont know. Any help would be appriciated. The dr said that shes growing just fine, not underweight or anything just normal but was concerned about the formula thing. Thanks in advance for your help.
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So What Happened?™
Thanks for all the great advice, I have bought her a couple different sippy cups and so far she just likes to chew on them, im sure she will figure it out soon. As for the formula i have been making her cereals with formula now instead of just water and i have also been giving her 1 additonal bottle a day so for now shes been getting about 22 oz of formula through the bottle and then alittle more with the cereal. I think that should be good for now. We will keep at the sippy cup thing and see what happens. Thanks again for all your great suggestions and advice.
Featured Answers
N.M. answers from Casper on October 11, 2006
Try widening the hole in the nipple. Take a toothpick and put it into the hole of the nipple. Boil it in water for 5 minutes and AFTER it cools down to room temp, take the toothpick out. I found this to work as a step toward a sip cup.
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M.S. answers from Spokane on October 11, 2006
Both of my children were picky when they were little and getting formula down was quite a battle because neither of them used a bottle after 5 months of age. Believe me, I was blessed beyond belief. Anyhow, we used sippy cups instead. This way when the kiddos were thirsty it was water or formula, it really helped getting in the nutrients they needed. Hope that helps.
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More Answers
J.F. answers from Boise on October 10, 2006
have you started her using a sippy cup yet? my girls are 6 months old and are just starting. you can give her formula in her sippy cup if she'll take it, and it might make it even easier to get rid of the bottle in a few months. good luck!
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R.B. answers from Portland on October 10, 2006
I would definately try to switch to the sippy now, but don't force it if she's not ready. Also, if she's getting about 18 oz of formula a day, that sounds pretty good, but if the Dr. is concerned, could you add an oz or 2 per bottle before nap...or maybe give her some during her solid meals? I wouldn't worry too much about it...as long as she's happy and healthy, and getting solids too...although right now, solids should just be for practice and formula should still be their source of nutrition.
Also, once they turn a year, they should still have 16-20 oz of whole milk (per my ped) until they are 2, so if she is still on the bottle at one, it's ok, just switch to whole milk and work on switching to sippys then!
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T.V. answers from Spokane on October 11, 2006
M.,
I would say if you are going to try to give her more formula that you don't necessarily have to give it to her in a bottle. If you are concerned about trying to get rid of the bottle then put it in a cup. I started my daughter on a cup at about 5 months old and she did great with it. Anyway, there is just not necessrily a need to give her a bottle more often.
Do you give her something to drink during the day when she has her other meals? Cause if not then you could give her a cup of formula at these times (not enough for a full bottle; just a few ounces). That would give her a little more formula, and again not having to necessarily give her a bottle.
Hope this helped!
T. :o)
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N.R. answers from Eugene on October 15, 2006
I breastfed my 2nd one for 3 months & he was eating so much I couldn't produce fast enough so I had to start him on formula as well. He was a chunky but funky as a baby, but they say it's like a puppy...you can leave food down all the time, but they will only eat til they are full. I would just let your dd eat what she wants, she'll stop when she's full. Good luck!
Nel
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N.M. answers from Casper on October 11, 2006
Try widening the hole in the nipple. Take a toothpick and put it into the hole of the nipple. Boil it in water for 5 minutes and AFTER it cools down to room temp, take the toothpick out. I found this to work as a step toward a sip cup.
1 mom found this helpful
K.E. answers from St. Louis on October 11, 2006
Hi M.,
My son did this at 9 months, he enjoyed his food much more. Our doctor had us keep a sippy cup of formula handy for him throught the day(You can get the slow drip cups). We had to monitor the ounces of formula after awhile because he loved it and we would fill in with filtered water. Needless to say the bottle just dissapeared.
Good luck,
K.
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C.M. answers from Anchorage on October 11, 2006
I tried a sippy cup with my kids, and that worked. So did putting formula in the cereal.
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S.C. answers from Provo on October 11, 2006
My daughter was eating sold foods at nine months as well. When I feed her cereal I'd use formula instead of milk or juice. With my doctor it was a calcium and protein thing. My daughter eats yogurt at least once a day. Not the trix or kid friendly labeled stuff. Regular generic fruit yogurt. I'd add rice crispies for grain. That seemed to be enough for her.
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