T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1125.1 | | MAIL2::LOCOVARE | | Mon Apr 15 1996 11:16 | 16 |
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I would certainly talk to your pediatrician but some thoughts..
What type do you use..if premade maybe try a new can in case that
one can didn't taste right. I used to use concetrate and some cans
seemed to have a stronger smell than others..not that anything was
wrong with them just different (my son drank it anyway)
Does she take the bottle for juice? Is it a bottle thing problem?
New nipple?
Also when children start food they take less formula and are
excited about new tastes!
Good luck
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1125.2 | Vary diet to insure proper vitamins | SUPER::HARRIS | | Mon Apr 15 1996 14:03 | 23 |
| I'm curious how many new and different foods your daughter has had
recently? Both of my kids seemed to go through a phase of not really
liking either milk or formula, especially when more interesting tastes
came along. For my son, he wasn't interested for most of the time
between 1 and 4 years old (rediscovered it only because one of his good
friends always asks for it).
As for my daughter, we visited family in the southwest during the summer
when she was eight months old. This was when she FIRST started turning
away milk. I guessed it was the heat, since she drank lots of juice.
But, I was lucky if she'd drink 8 oz of formula per day. From then
on, she'd only drink formula (or milk) before a nap, and from a bottle.
Now that she's off the bottle, she absolutely won't drink it from a cup
(takes a drink, realizes what it is, opens her mouth and just lets it
spill out).
I've spoken to my pediatrician about this a few times. Since both of
my kids are good yogurt eaters (they'll eat plain or flavored yogurt)
and big cheese eaters, she wasn't worried. She said to vary their
diets, make sure they took their vitamins, and give them enough yogurt,
cheese, or other milk products to provide sufficient calcium.
Peggy
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1125.3 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Mon Apr 15 1996 14:38 | 12 |
| 6-8 months is the range for nursing babies to go on a "nursing strike."
They really cut back on nursing duiring this time for a bit, and then,
just as you are ready to decide they want to quit they pick back up
again. Since babies are babies, regardless of how they are fed, it
wouldn't surprise me that bottle babies would go through the same
thing.
Check with you care providor to make sure there isn't anything else
going on, but if she or he is really getting into solid foods this may
be a short-term thing, until they bablance things back out.
meg
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1125.4 | | USOPS::CASEY | | Mon Apr 15 1996 17:02 | 12 |
|
Thanks for the feedback. She has really been expanding her diet
lately. All different types of baby food and her cereal. We just
introduced yogurt, she's not that crazy about it. I'm going to call
the pedi tomorrow and I'll still try to give her the formula. She's
not that crazy about juice either. It helps to know other people
have had the same experience because theres nothing about this in
any of the baby books. Thanks again and keep those suggestions and
info coming.
Kathy
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1125.5 | dehydration might be a risk | MPGS::HEALEY | Karen Healey, VIIS Group, SHR3 | Tue Apr 16 1996 08:56 | 12 |
|
I'd worry most about dehydration. Make sure she is getting plenty
of fluids.
Also, when people give their children yoghurt, do you mean plain
yoghurt? I hate that stuff! I can't imagine why a baby would like
it... seems like an acquired taste to me. Now, fruit flavored yoghurt
is a different story but it has alot of sugar added which makes
me shy away from that for a very young child.
Karen
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1125.6 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Tue Apr 16 1996 14:29 | 20 |
| Karen,
My kids started out on plain yogurt with fresh fruit mixed in. Small
children don't seem to have the same taste buds adults have. If they
did there wouldn't be so much concern about accidental poisonings from
clorox, ammonia, gasoline.......
Also, I am a compulsive lable reader. Not all fruit-flavored yogurts
are created equally. Some have been sweetened to the point where they
hurt my teeth, while others retain the tartness that yogurt and fruit
should have IMO. With the new lablelling requirements in the US it is
fairly easy to figure out which are which.
When Atlehi had a tummy problem that had her rejecting everything but
mama, Frank and I found whe would take a small amount of water or juice
in a spoon. It does take frequent offering, but she made it through,
until we figured out what was causing the upsets.
meg
meg
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1125.7 | plain yogurt - yum! | MROA::LEMIRE | | Tue Apr 16 1996 17:24 | 18 |
| Regarding .5
I began feeding my daughter plain yogurt, and she loved it. She was
about 9 months old. At this point, she had not had any sugary foods,
and I'm sure that's one reason she enjoyed it. Later, I tried feeding
her yogurt with fruit added, and she turned it down!
I think it's similar to thinking you need to salt your baby's food
because you like salt, when in reality, their base of comparison
is a blank slate! I try not to let my pickiness interfere with
what I give my daughter; she's already a better eater than I ever was!
Regards,
Jennie
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1125.8 | Don't forget teething! | SUBSYS::MIDTTUN | | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:48 | 8 |
| Your child could also be teething...Since the front teeth generally come
in first, the nipple on the bottle could be painful. So, it might not be
the formula at all...Not sure if this help you deal w/ it, but might help
in understanding...As noted by others, I would be concerned w/ maintaining
fluid intake though (dehydration)...Maybe a little baby tylenol, or orajel
(my kids always vomited this back at me, but it may work for you), a cold
teething ring or wet washcloth to suck on (maybe best as some of that
fluid will go down!), might help rule this idea in or out?
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1125.9 | Yogurt with FAT | USCTR1::BAKSTRAN | | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:05 | 5 |
| Not that this relates..however, I haven't been able to find plain
'regular-fat' yogurt. Its all no-fat, low fat. Is there such
an animal??
|
1125.10 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:34 | 11 |
|
re .9
You may want to check health food stores for regular yogurt.
They sure make regular yogurt, that's all they made before
the low fat craze. Stonefield Farms, Whitney's, Breyer's
make them. Try your local diary farms, they may have them
too.
Eva
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1125.11 | Fat, and Cream too! | SUPER::HARRIS | | Wed Apr 24 1996 22:24 | 4 |
| Stony Field Farms Organic Plain yogurt even has a layer of cream on the
top! We buy this, mix it with one part yogurt, one part thawed juice
concentrate, and one part water... then freeze as popsicles. They're
great!
|