Anonymous wrote:I do find it weird because when you breastfeed no one tells you to limit you much you feed when you nurse. Baby's acting hungry, you give them the boob.
Anonymous wrote:I do find it weird because when you breastfeed no one tells you to limit you much you feed when you nurse. Baby's acting hungry, you give them the boob.
Anonymous wrote:I do find it weird because when you breastfeed no one tells you to limit you much you feed when you nurse. Baby's acting hungry, you give them the boob.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, replying to PP and the poster above who assume the issue is my own eating disorder - incorrect.
We have been following the recommendation of the baby's pediatrician. Just last week we went over her growth, the total volume of food the baby eats which the Dr. said was appropriate. In discussing how much and when to give more milk she specifically suggested trying to give 1/2 to 1 ounce at a time and see if that satisfied the baby (which is why i tried 1 oz when she first woke from her nap). The doctor did say that overfeeding IS a possible outcome for babies who eat pumped breast milk.
Everything I have read says that its not too early to try to establish a schedule (esp. as she begins to sleep longer at night). For those who said 4 hour increments were long those were established by the baby and what we have been doing for weeks. We have been trying to reinforce specific times in hopes of establishing a schedule. But I get that needs change at this age.
did you tell the pediatrician that the baby seems hungry and is crying for more food?
you literally have one job right now, which is to feed your baby. aside from colic, a well fed baby eats their fill and is satisfied until the next feeding, repeat repeat repeat.
I did not bc when we saw the pediatrician she wasnt doing this; this is a yesterday evening and today thing (thats why the subject of this post was is this cluster feeding).
At the peds office they took the baby's measurements and we reviewed growth since last visit. She told me percentiles (h/w about 50th). I told her how much we were feeding and how often and she said it sounded great and "it wasnt too much or too little." I ask how/when we would know to increase or feed more; she said to do the 1/2 ounce or 1 ounce thing.
Anonymous wrote:Are you seeing enough fat in your pumped milk, OP? Are you shaking or mixing the bottle before giving it to her? If yes-Stop. The rich fatty milk should be the last she takes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, replying to PP and the poster above who assume the issue is my own eating disorder - incorrect.
We have been following the recommendation of the baby's pediatrician. Just last week we went over her growth, the total volume of food the baby eats which the Dr. said was appropriate. In discussing how much and when to give more milk she specifically suggested trying to give 1/2 to 1 ounce at a time and see if that satisfied the baby (which is why i tried 1 oz when she first woke from her nap). The doctor did say that overfeeding IS a possible outcome for babies who eat pumped breast milk.
Everything I have read says that its not too early to try to establish a schedule (esp. as she begins to sleep longer at night). For those who said 4 hour increments were long those were established by the baby and what we have been doing for weeks. We have been trying to reinforce specific times in hopes of establishing a schedule. But I get that needs change at this age.
did you tell the pediatrician that the baby seems hungry and is crying for more food?
you literally have one job right now, which is to feed your baby. aside from colic, a well fed baby eats their fill and is satisfied until the next feeding, repeat repeat repeat.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, replying to PP and the poster above who assume the issue is my own eating disorder - incorrect.
We have been following the recommendation of the baby's pediatrician. Just last week we went over her growth, the total volume of food the baby eats which the Dr. said was appropriate. In discussing how much and when to give more milk she specifically suggested trying to give 1/2 to 1 ounce at a time and see if that satisfied the baby (which is why i tried 1 oz when she first woke from her nap). The doctor did say that overfeeding IS a possible outcome for babies who eat pumped breast milk.
Everything I have read says that its not too early to try to establish a schedule (esp. as she begins to sleep longer at night). For those who said 4 hour increments were long those were established by the baby and what we have been doing for weeks. We have been trying to reinforce specific times in hopes of establishing a schedule. But I get that needs change at this age.