| I would keep an eye on DD but not jump in with high-calorie foods just yet. It makes sense just to come back in one month (or get weighed at home). Don't make a huge deal of it with DD, but do start paying attention to her eating habits, so that you have more information for the pediatrician in a month. |
One response was that it was NBD....
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| Is she stressed? Also I agree check her thyroid. |
| 3 lbs really isnt concerning, I've seen my kids fluctuate like that with using a different scale at the drs office. |
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OP my kid gained 0 lbs from 9 to 11 and grew a ton during those years and we started getting side eye from the doctor about what she was eating and variety, etc. Her eating was great! It was just how her body was built.
Then the next year, she hit puberty and gained 25 lbs (I kid you not) and we got THE OPPOSITE lecture about whether kid was eating healthy foods, too much, nutritionally balanced, etc. Children are people, not averages. I'd do the check your doctor asks but also trust your gut. |
The boy thing is plain vanity, that’s it. But if she’s in the 60th percentile for height AND weight I have a hard time believing the doctor is concerned. If her weight goes up 3 lbs and her height stays them same, she won’t be as proportionate as she is now. |
| My daughter is on the slim side. She plays two sports in the fall and spring and zero in the summer and winter but is active year round. She tends towards underweight. She always gets thin when she’s playing but gains it back afterwards. Is something like that going on? Also, she really only needs 200 extra calories per day to gain. |
| Op here. Thanks for all the thoughts. She is very active. She does swim team and practices 3-4 days a week so that could be part of it but we are trying to feed her more calorie dense foods and encourage her to eat more in general. |
Oh FFS |
My pediatrician encouraged us to: 1) Offer both my daughters “fourth meal” before bed, whatever they would eat, usually a yogurt or a piece of toast with honey 2) Add butter and oil wherever we could, like butter on steamed broccoli and not just the plain broccoli; more-than normal butter on toast; oil on top of pasta, then the sauce 3) Whole milk only, even well into middle school They’re both on track now, just barely, but enough that the pediatrician doesn’t lecture us anymore! |
| My child has always been sub-2% in weight so it’s a little different but one of the things I was told is not to worry too much about “healthy” calories vs calories. Obviously don’t feed the kid a diet of empty calories like soda, but healthy eating for a kid might not look the same as for an adult. It’s most important kids get enough calories. |
Over the course of an entire year you’d expect some gains. It’s appropriate for the ped to follow up. |
Ah—I see it is only 6 months. Less concerning but still worth keeping an eye on. |