T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1150.1 | Later for juice | WR2FOR::BELINSKY_MA | | Fri Sep 27 1991 18:55 | 16 |
| I suspect this is something that will vary a lot by individual. My
sister-in-law started her daughter at 5 months; I started juice at 5
1/2 or 6 months. One friend's pedi told her just breastmilk for six
months, no solids or juice.
Personally, I believe that the baby's digestive system is still
developing and may not be able to handle too much too soon. The
question is why do they need it? Same thing with cereal in the bottle
at night to get them to sleep longer. I think for the first few months
they will eat what they need in formula or breastmilk, and other foods,
including juice, can wait a while.
Just my $.02
Mary
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1150.2 | 5 months | JUPITR::MAHONEY | | Mon Sep 30 1991 09:29 | 6 |
| I started my daughter on juice at 5 mpnths also. I diluted it, 1/4
juice, 3/4 water. Then as she got older I diluted it 1/2 and 1/2.
She had no reaction to it at all.
Sandy
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1150.3 | | USOPS::GALLANT | your fingertips keep callin' me | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:34 | 13 |
|
While my daughter has no allergic reactions to juice, I do
find that she can't keep it down as well as regular formula
or solids.
Don't know why, but the only time I give her juice is when
it's mixed in with her cereal.
FWIW, she's six and a half months old.
/Kim
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1150.4 | Try different juices | CHCLAT::HAGEN | Please send truffles! | Mon Sep 30 1991 11:23 | 18 |
| Your Holly sounds alot like my Scott. He, too, was drinking 6-7 oz. bottles
around 5 times per day at 3 mos. I called his pedi. and asked if I should
start him on cereal but she said not to since he seemed happy with that feeding
pattern. Then around 4 mos. he was up to 8 oz. bottles, so I started giving
him a bottle of juice in the afternoon to postpone his 4th (and final) feeding
to evening (so he wouldn't drink five 8-oz bottles!)
I tried different juices because apple juice made him spit up alot (he's a
spitter anyways.) I read in last month's "American Baby" magazine that many
babies have difficulty digesting apple juice and grape juice is actually
easier for them. I've never giving Scott grape juice, mainly because I buy
those little Gerber bottles and they don't come in grape, but he does OK with
the pear juice ones.
If you use diluted juice, my pedi says "No tap water unless it is boiled first,
for at least 6 mos."
� �ori �
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1150.5 | but no OJ until a year old | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Mon Sep 30 1991 13:38 | 19 |
| My pedi gave me the "official" OK for juice at 5 months. I say
official because by then he had had a couple surgeries, or prep for the
ones that were cancelled at the last minute. For these it was "clear
liquids" for 3 days prior to surgery. For this it was half pedialye
with half of a clear juice, which was apple, pear or white-grape.
For the official OK I was only warned NO Orange juice until he was a
year. Never questioned her on this, but I figured she might have been
thinking the acid in it might affect him in some way.
I started out with a 3 part "sterilized" water to one part apple juice,
he did well and changed the ratio gradually. I'm not sure where of if
you can buy "sterilized" water. I was using the little bottles they
give you in the hospital, or the one litre bottles the hospital keeps
for irrigation. I purposely avoided tap water for quite a while.
Lyn
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1150.6 | AJ at 2 months... | STAR::LEWIS | | Mon Sep 30 1991 14:15 | 13 |
| >For the official OK I was only warned NO Orange juice until he was a
>year. Never questioned her on this, but I figured she might have been
>thinking the acid in it might affect him in some way.
My pedi said that young kids are often allergic to the white part
(pith?) of the orange and that many commercially prepared oj's had
some in it. He said that if I wanted to squeeze my own oj, after
carefully removing all the white part, it would be ok. This was at
my son's six month checkup. He gave the ok for diluted apple juice at
two months.
Sue
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1150.7 | apple juice at 2 months | MEMIT::GIUNTA | | Mon Sep 30 1991 14:22 | 16 |
| I've been giving Jessica well-diluted apple juice for a few weeks now.
She is 5 months old today, but only 2 months old per the corrected age.
And she's been getting rice cereal in her bottle for her night-time
feeding for almost a month now, and does sleep through the night. Her
pedi says that as long as it agrees with her, it's OK, and that she
will let us know if she doesn't like something. We'll be trying her on
solids (rice cereal by spoon) probably some time this week since her
appetite has really been increasing.
I originally started Jessica on juice because she was constipated, and
the pedi recommended either prune juice (which went over like a lead
balloon) or sugar water or Karo syrup or other fruit juices. And I
user regular tap water to dilute the juice and to make the formula. My
pedi asked if I was boiling the water, which I was, but said that I
really didn't need to do that.
|
1150.8 | another opinion on boiling water | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Mon Sep 30 1991 14:36 | 10 |
|
re: boiling water
Our pedi recommended boiling water only if our water supply was
private well that was not tested on a regular (?how often?, I don't
recall) basis. She said that the boiling was necessary years ago
but that public water supplies are far better regulated these
days.
Carol
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1150.9 | Pedi okay @2 months | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Mon Sep 30 1991 15:03 | 9 |
|
I got the okay for juice (diluted half and half) at 2 months. Anna is
now 5 months old (Oct. 3). This summer she got lots of juice or water,
but now since it's cooler I notice I tend not to offer it that often.
Mostly when I've put her down for a nap cause she's tired, but she
fights it and works herself up I give her some water or juice, she
calms right down and doesn't complain when I put her back down.
Patty
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1150.10 | 6 wks juice/8 wks food | MRSTAG::MTAG | | Mon Sep 30 1991 15:36 | 18 |
| I started Jackie on very diluted apple juice before 2 months old. The
doctor didn't mind and said it was a good source of sugar and liquid in
the very hot summer months (this was July, 1990) and that it would not
hurt her.
As for her eating habits, I started her on cereal at 8 weeks and
bananas at 10 weeks. At that time, she was approaching 35-40oz of
formula a day and it was not satisfying her appetite. She was a big
baby at birth and continues to be in the 95% for her age. Anyway, the
doctor also had no objections to this. It also has worked out well, at
least I think so. By starting her on food early, she does not turn her
nose down on anything and will try everything. There are, of course,
foods she does not like (pickles, broccoli, spinach), but for the most
part she eats what my husband and I eat which makes things easy at
dinnertime.
Mary
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1150.11 | 8 weeks apple juice | OGOMTS::ASPENCER | | Mon Sep 30 1991 23:53 | 12 |
| I started William on 1/2 water 1/2 apple juice at 2 months old. The
doctor said apple sauce and rice cereal at 5 months. William will be
3 months old next week. I tried applesauce in the morning and cereal
in the evening for three days. I stopped because I notice a rash on his
face. I also notice that he was getting up during the night when he
had the cereal. He is going from 8 or 9 till about 5 or 6 in the
morning. I will try again in 2 weeks. He is drinking about 28 oz
formula and 8 oz of diluted apple juice.
|
1150.12 | one year?? | EN::VARDARO | Nancy | Tue Oct 01 1991 11:29 | 5 |
| It's been a while since my son is 3.5, but from what I can
remember, my pedi discouraged juice till one year! I'm also
not sure on the reasoning, but I thought it had something to
do with having them fill up with juice rather than milk or
formula ...
|
1150.13 | Orange juice is hard to stomach | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue Oct 01 1991 12:15 | 9 |
| Well, I know that most pedis don't want you to start orange juice
before age 1, because it is very acid and it's pretty hard to
stomach. Some kids get terribly diarrahea from it; others get
rashes from it. I was just wondering if anyone had heard "the
word" about starting juice in general.
Interesting note in here about pear juice -- the one juice that
*always* gave James a bellyache. He could eat strained pears just
fine, but the juice was a totally different story.
|
1150.14 | on juice | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Wed Oct 02 1991 12:16 | 20 |
| I started Kat on orange juice at 2 months or less and never had a
problem. I don't remember about Steven, though I assume it was
the little bottled Gerber kinds and fairly early since he was an
infant in the summer. David being a fall baby didn't get juice
until he was 6-7 months old.
Grape juice was the early favorite with all my kids. The white grape
juice went over better than the purple kind.
David's also quite fond of cranberry juice. A friend with an
ulcer told me that cranberry juice, unlike most other juices, is
alkiline rather than acid, so it doesn't irritate the stomach.
A recent favorite is (are) the all-natural juices that you buy in
the dairy section in cardboard half-gallon cartons. Steven likes
the guava or other tropical mixes, and David likes the kind called
Cherry Orchard. I diluted it about 5 oz. water to 3 oz. juice
when was little.
--bonnie
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1150.15 | 3 months | AD::HOUGHTON | | Wed Oct 02 1991 16:21 | 11 |
|
My baby is 5 months (Oct 4th) and has been drinking juice
since 3 1/3 months. I usually dilute it 1/2 and 1/2. We started
giving him juice about the same time we started feeding him formula
because he was getting constipated. The juice really did the trick.
he now has an 8oz bottle in the morning with a little cereal, another
8oz bottle, cereal and a jar of baby fruit for lunch, 8oz bottle for
dinner with a jar of a vegetable, then another 8oz bottle before bed.
it is amazing how fast they adapt to food, and then the quantity
seems to increase so rapidly, along with his size.
|
1150.17 | I wouldn't be in a hurry to start juices | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital is not thriving on chaos. | Wed Oct 02 1991 23:22 | 13 |
| We started offering Michael juices at around 3 months I think, but he
wanted no part of it. I think he was probably closer to 4 months when he
decided juice wasn't so bad after all. When we switched him from formula
to milk, he never really liked milk and still doesn't. So now he drinks
lots and lots of juice. We were worried about his calcium intake (it takes
a lotta cheese to provide the calcium of 16 oz milk), but then Pat found
this Parents Choice juice in the grocery store -- apple, apple/berry, and
apple/mixed fruit or something like that. It's fortified with the
same amount of calcium as milk, and Michael loves it. Our pedi said as
long as he's drinking that stuff, don't worry about the milk at all. We
also use the calcium-fortified orange juice.
Steve
|
1150.18 | not just a calcium requirement | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Thu Oct 03 1991 10:57 | 10 |
| re: .17
It is my understanding that it is not only the calcium, but also
the fat, that children under 2 years of age require. Adequate
intake of fats in young babies is required for brain cell development.
I believe this is why many pediatricians and the AAP recommend whole
milk for children under the age of 2. However, I suppose the fat
requirement could be easily made up with cheeses and the like.
Carol
|
1150.19 | read labels, and reports on juice | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Thu Oct 03 1991 17:17 | 13 |
| RE: A couple back.... just be careful if you're giving cranberry
juice. Yes it is in fact alkaline, that's why it's so good for UTI's,
but almost all the commericial cran-anything are just loaded with corn
syrup, sugar and generally contain only 10 to 30% actual juice. I'm
not completely sure but I think the Adam and Eve brand may be more if
not all cranberry juice.
RE: .17, there was a study done a few years ago, shortly after all the
OJ companies started advertising that they had calcium in them. The
end result of the study was that when calcium is added to juice, the
body infact absorbs little or NONE of the calcium, FYI Trivia stuff!
Lyn
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1150.20 | 2 mos | EMDS::CUNNINGHAM | | Tue Jan 07 1992 11:20 | 13 |
|
My pedi told me I could start Michael on juice at his 2 month visit.
He said once he starts eating more than 32 oz of formula a day that I
could supplement one bottle a day with juice instead of formula, and I
could start some cereal too. He's been on fruit since one month old
because of constipation problems (what h*ll that is!!). But so far he's
only drinking about 30 oz of formula a day, and 1 jar of fruit, so I
haven't pushed the cereal (becuase of the constipation). I give him
some juice (1/2 and 1/2) occassionally between meals to tide him over
till his next bottle.
Chris
|