Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are supposed to boil the water and let it cool to 98.6 degrees or so (body temperature) before mixing. Don’t mix the formula with boiling water! Boil enough for the whole day. We filtered the water, boiled it, then let it cool in an aluminum lined thermos-type jug (meant to hold coffee, I think).
Depends on who you follow. WHO and CDC add formula to boiling water then cool. AAP boil water, let it cook then add formula.
https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/143/6/e20182525/37124/Mixed-Message-on-Formula-Mixing
To add-- the AAP says "if one is concerned or uncertain," not that everyone should.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are supposed to boil the water and let it cool to 98.6 degrees or so (body temperature) before mixing. Don’t mix the formula with boiling water! Boil enough for the whole day. We filtered the water, boiled it, then let it cool in an aluminum lined thermos-type jug (meant to hold coffee, I think).
Depends on who you follow. WHO and CDC add formula to boiling water then cool. AAP boil water, let it cook then add formula.
https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/143/6/e20182525/37124/Mixed-Message-on-Formula-Mixing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve used filtered water from a Brita for three kids, no issues. Get your baby used to cold or room temp water, it will make your life a lot easier.
This is not the question. A friend of mine grew up riding in a cardboard box in the backseat of a station wagon instead of in a car seat. No issues. OP is asking what you’re “supposed” to do.
![]()
The CDC and AAP websites just say to boil the water, prepare the formula, and let it cool before giving to baby. Do you need a bunch of internet strangers to reiterate that to you on DCUM?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve used filtered water from a Brita for three kids, no issues. Get your baby used to cold or room temp water, it will make your life a lot easier.
This is not the question. A friend of mine grew up riding in a cardboard box in the backseat of a station wagon instead of in a car seat. No issues. OP is asking what you’re “supposed” to do.
Anonymous wrote:I just use bottled water. Boiling is too much of a hassle.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve used filtered water from a Brita for three kids, no issues. Get your baby used to cold or room temp water, it will make your life a lot easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t ask DCUM! You will get crazy answers. The person who linked to CDC and WHO and AAP above is correct. There is conflicting advice. Most new moms don’t even know this advice so they just use the water they drink and it works out fine. But that’s not what CDC and WHO and AAP recommend. It’s not about cleanliness of the water. It’s about bacteria in the formula.
Ok but no one has provided an answer about what temperature the water needs to be to kill cronobacter.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve used filtered water from a Brita for three kids, no issues. Get your baby used to cold or room temp water, it will make your life a lot easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so tired of people in the us not getting good information on how to prepare formula. Even the Europeans are more up to date on this than is. This thread is proof of that. Those babies in the formula recalled died as the powder had cronobacter and was not sterilized. To kill cronobacter but preserve the nutrients in the formula powder you have to use hot water to prepare, but not so hot it will destroy nutrients. The way I used to do it was add hot water to the formula powder and then since the powder is then sterilized cold water to cool it down and make a warm bottle of formula. All those people talking about tap water, you were lucky. The hot water is not for the quality of the water, it’s the formula powder that’s the issue. You need to sterilize it.
People on this thread have said that. Do you have a source for what temperature cronerbacter is killed?
Anonymous wrote:Don’t ask DCUM! You will get crazy answers. The person who linked to CDC and WHO and AAP above is correct. There is conflicting advice. Most new moms don’t even know this advice so they just use the water they drink and it works out fine. But that’s not what CDC and WHO and AAP recommend. It’s not about cleanliness of the water. It’s about bacteria in the formula.