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- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!emory!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mane.cgrg.ohio-state.edu!ashley
- From: ashley@osc.edu (Ashley Burns)
- Subject: Summary: Fine Art of Introducing Solids
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.212205.8663@cgrg.ohio-state.edu>
- Keywords: infant feeding
- Sender: news@cgrg.ohio-state.edu (Usenet News Poster)
- Organization: The Ohio Supercomputer Center
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 21:22:05 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- Well, Austin is finally eating things fairly regularly. This is a
- summary of responses to my questions posted, um, about six weeks ago
- (!). I have to attribute the delay in posting this to procrastination
- and avoidance of the subject. After a week of eating vegetables okay,
- Austin (then 4 months, now 5.25 months) refused to eat anything but
- milk/formula. At that time he wouldn't eat cereal at all (I tried dry
- rice and dry oatmeal cereal), but now he submits to canned rice cereal
- with fruit. That's a big no-no in some people's books because it may
- get him accustomed to sweet things. But that's what we're feeding him.
- He gained less than a pound in two months, which worried me at the
- time. I'm happy to announce that in the last two weeks his food intake
- (in terms of formula) has increased by 8 oz per day, in addition to his
- solid fare!
-
- Austin has a strange habit: he has to have his thumb in his mouth any
- time the spoon is not in his mouth! I tap his palm with the spoon, he
- removes the thumb just long enough to take the bite, and then he
- sticks his thumb back in. Surprisingly, very little food oozes out.
-
- My first question was about technique: is there a trick to getting food
- off a spoon and into their mouths? Specifically, do they suck off
- the spoon, as my mother said her children did (and implied Austin
- should)?
-
- A slight majority of people who responded (5) said their babies never
- sucked off the spoon. Most people tip the end of the spoon up when
- removing it from the baby's mouth so the upper lip scrapes off the
- contents. One person used infant feeding gadgets like big syringes that
- dispense food with much success for a few months. I think this is a
- great idea and if I could have found them in my local stores :-( I
- would have tried them. Several people complained about the mess; and
- according to some it got worse when the baby started exploring his/her
- food:-).
-
- My second question was how much food to give.
-
- Everyone said the first food was just a supplement, and not to decrease
- milk/formula yet. Several commented that 35 oz, which is what Austin
- was drinking, approximately (I was estimating based on what I could
- pump--I was breastfeeding), was a LOT. If that was a lot, I wonder why
- he was not gaining weight. Several things I have read outside of
- misc.kids, where the real info comes from:-), say that a baby eats
- about 3 times as many fluid ounces as its weight in pounds. That would
- put Austin at 48 oz daily (and now even more)!
-
- During the last two weeks he has been eating 40-45 oz. per day, in
- 5 feedings. I guess we feed him less often than most others, judging
- by the schedules posted recently. One of the variables is that he
- just never asks for food. He complains plenty, but a bottle rarely
- helps:-). The first day he started eating, he ate 17 oz. in 7 hours
- at our daycare provider's house (not really that much for an average
- baby, but he had never had more than 8 oz during that period). She
- seriously thought he was sick.
-
- One person forwarded a very sensible, well put together, summary
- on infant feeding.
-
- Thanks to all who have responded to my questions about infant weight
- and feeding. I apologize for not summarizing promptly. Feeding issues
- just were overwhelming me!
-
- --Ashley Burns, ashley@osc.edu
-