How
Should I Start Feeding My Baby Solids?When your baby is ready and the doctor
has given you the OK to try solid foods, pick a time of day when your baby is
not tired or cranky.
How Should I Start Feeding My Baby Solids?
How Should I Start Feeding My Baby Solids?
When your
baby is ready and the doctor has given you the OK to try solid foods, pick a
time of day when your baby is not tired or cranky. You want your baby to be a
little hungry, but not all-out starving; you might want to let your baby
breastfeed a while, or provide part of the usual bottle. Have your baby sit
supported in your lap or in an upright infant seat. Infants, who sit well,
usually around 6 months, can be placed in a high chair with a safety strap. Use
a highchair as soon as your baby can sit easily without support. To safely use
a highchair:
--Select a
chair with a broad, stable base that won't tip easily.
--Use the
safety straps every time you put your baby in the chair.
--Keep
other children from pulling, climbing or hanging on to the highchair.
--Place the
highchair a safe distance from the counter, table or any other stationary
object your baby could push against forcefully enough to tip him or herself
over. Give your baby enough time to finish each meal.
Most babies
are full after 20 minutes of mealtime, including several minutes of exploring
their food and socializing with the person feeding them. When your baby has had
enough to eat, he or she will refuse the spoon with mouth closed or face turned
away. Follow his or her lead, and never try to force in a few more bites.
Our medical
advisors recommend that a baby's first food should be root vegetables (yams,
carrots) or fruit rather than rice cereal. The first feeding may be nothing
more than a little food mixed in a whole lot of liquid.
Place the
spoon near your baby's lips, and let the baby smell and taste. Don't be
surprised if this first spoonful is rejected. Wait a minute and try again. Most
food offered to your baby at this age will end up on the baby's chin, bib, or
high-chair tray. Again, this is just an introduction.
Have the
right equipment a small-sized plastic baby feeding spoon does not transmit heat
or cold while having a smooth edge.
Do's
--Sit baby
comfortably on your lap, baby hair chair or infant seat.
--Tie a bib
in place and hold baby's head gently but firmly so that a sudden turn does not
result in an eye or an ear full.
--Place the
spoon in the baby's mouth on top of the tongue. Remove it with an upwards
motion so the food is pushed off the top gum or lip.
--Offer no
more than a few drops at a time at first. And if it gets spitted back, gently
retrieve it from the chin and return it to the mouth.
--If your
baby is unwilling to eat after a few attempts, discard the food and begin again
later with a new preparation.
Don'ts
--Never
attempt to feed baby cereal from a bottle using a teat with an enlarged hole.
Cereals are intended as a supplement to the normal intake of milk. Your baby
does not have take it from spoon, try later.
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