Heres One for the Math People

Updated on October 18, 2011
T.C. asks from Kingsport, TN
5 answers

Ok I need some help again, we are running low on stored breast milk and I need to try and find out when we will catch up to production or when to add more formula, We have 19 jars of breast milk each jar has 16oz, DS takes 15oz of bm a day, I realize that equals out to 20 days but where Im gettin confused is at the end of each day I replace 12oz of it. Once Its thawed you cant re-freeze it so I need help finding out how long it will take to catch up to production at this rate.

FYI he takes a total of about 19oz depending on if he want to drink it all, 15oz bm 4oz soy formula, didnt take to the regular stuff, and according to the info I got from the doc the 11th or 12th as long as he drinks 16-20oz we are ok, he does drink a little water also.

Please no condeming comments all Im looking for is a little help figure this out as I am trying to continue to give bm till we are as close to 1 as possible.

ADD: Yes the "replace" is I pump, and freeze each 16oz as it gets there, ALSO he is 9 and a half months old will be 10months on the 3rd so Im almost there just trying to get an idea and THANK YOU ALL for your help

What can I do next?

  • Add yourAnswer own comment
  • Ask your own question Add Question
  • Join the Mamapedia community Mamapedia
  • as inappropriate
  • this with your friends

So What Happened?

THANK YOU ever so much for the help, this leads into my next question

More Answers

V.W.

answers from Jacksonville on

Sounds relatively simple.
He drinks 15 oz of breastmilk per day. You replace (pump?) 12 oz. per day. Net loss of 3 oz per day.
15-12= 3 oz per day
So, if you have 19 jars of 16 oz each, using it at the rate of 3 oz. per day, then you would have 5 1/3 days per jar. Which, multiplied times 19 jars is about 101 days. (101 1/3 days actually).

Anybody else want to confirm ?

For Riley: Well, I didn't round anything, and that has a cumulative effect on the numbers. Because as you added another layer of days for each, you run out of days to add to sooner, because of the rounding. Additionally, you neglected to account for the difference in what was consumed (15 oz) vs the bottle size (16 oz). So one bottle does not equal one day. Technically.
In reality, it is probably somewhere in between our answers, b/c the numbers I used do not account for variations in consumption or production that are likely but unpredictable. :))

4 moms found this helpful
Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

S.R.

answers from El Paso on

19 jars * 16 oz = 304 oz.
x = # of days left

304 - (15-12)x = 304 - 3x

after x number of days, there will be 0 oz bm left, so 304-3x=0; add 3x to both sides, giving 304 = 3x; divide by 3, getting the 101.33.

I would have just said Bridgett & Victoria were right, but Riley asked a why. :)

Riley, I didn't check it, but my guess would be that without rounding, you would have come up to the 101 as well. Once you start dropping decimals, you get roundoff error.

3 moms found this helpful
Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

B.B.

answers from Missoula on

Yep, according to my calculations, and assuming that the child eats the same amount and mom is able to replace the same amount over time, Victoria is correct, 101.33 days.

Hubby is a math whiz and he double-checked my work :)

2 moms found this helpful

M.L.

answers from Houston on

Oh my gosh, this makes me head spin. So not a math person.

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

R.J.

answers from Seattle on

I bet there's a faster way/formula to do this, but here's my breakdown (wonder if it will be the same as other peoples'?)

Whenever I have to round (half days, I'm going to round down). I'm also just using 1 jar for day, since you're only an ounce off, and anything you don't use you lose. AKA 16oz per day, not 15.

19 days you have

12*19= 228 / 16 (your jar size) = 14 more days +
12*14 / 16 = 10
12*10/16= 7
12*7/16= 5
12*5/16= 3
12*3/16=2
12*2/16=1

19+14+10+7+5+3+2+1 = 61

BASICALLY = 61 days BUT subtract 1/3 to plan for growth spurts, spills, etc.

Count on 40 more days, but you may have as much as 2 more months as long as intake doesn't go up, production goes down, and you don't spill!
_____________________________________________________________

<Grin> Alright! If I'm wrong... why?

At the end of 19 days, there will be 14 new jars from the 12oz per day.
At the end of 14 days, there will be 10 new jars.

No?

For Updates and Special Promotions
Follow Us

Related Questions