Weaning is the replacement of bottle or breast-feedings with
drinking from a cup and eating solid foods. Weaning occurs easily and smoothly
unless the breast or bottle has become overly important to the child.
If you have a choice, it is best to wait until your baby is at
least 6 months old before you wean from the breast. Your baby's digestive
system is better able to tolerate a change in food after this age.
If you stop breast-feeding before 9 months of age, switch to
bottle-feeding first. You should still introduce your child to a cup at about
6 months of age, but wait to fully wean your baby to a cup until he is at
least 9 months old. If you stop breast-feeding after 9 months, you may be able
to wean your baby directly to a cup.
Preventing Problems
Children normally show less interest in breast and bottle
feedings between 6 and 12 months of age if they are also taking cup and spoon
feedings. Many children start weaning themselves by 12 months. After the age
of 12 to 18 months, the parent often has to start the weaning, but the child
will be receptive. After 18 months of age, the child usually resists weaning
because she has become overly attached to the breast or bottle.
If your child shows a lack of interest in the breast or bottle
at any time after 6 months of age, start to phase out these nipple feedings.
You can tell that your baby is ready to begin weaning when she throws the
bottle down, takes only a few ounces of milk and then stops, chews on the
nipple rather than sucking it, refuses the breast, or nurses for only a few
minutes and then wants to play.
The following steps encourage early natural weaning at 9 to 12
months:
- Keep bottle feedings to 4 times a
day or less after your child reaches 6
months of age.
Some breast-fed babies may need 5 feedings a day until 9
months of age.
- Give older infants their daytime
feedings at mealtime with solids.
Once your child is having just 4 formula or breast-feedings
a day, be sure 3 of them are given at mealtime with solids rather than as
part of the ritual before naps. Your child can have the fourth feeding
before he goes to bed at night.
- After your baby is 4 weeks old and
breast-feeding is well established, offer him a bottle of expressed breast
milk or water once a day.
This experience will help your baby get used to a bottle so
you can occasionally leave him with a baby sitter. This step is especially
important if you will be returning to work or school. The longer you wait to
introduce the bottle after your baby is 4 weeks old, the more strongly your
infant will initially reject it. If you wait until 2 months of age, it may
take several weeks for your baby to accept the bottle. Once your baby
accepts bottle feedings, continue to offer them 3 times a week so your baby
will continue to accept them.
- Hold your child for discomfort or
stress instead of nursing her.
You can comfort your child and foster a strong sense of
security and trust without nursing every time she is upset and not hungry.
If you always nurse your child in such situations, your child may learn to
eat whenever she is upset. She may also be unable to separate being held
from nursing, and you may become an "indispensable mother."
- Don't let the bottle or breast
substitute for a pacifier.
Learn to recognize when your baby just needs to suck. At
these times, instead of offering your child food, encourage him to suck on a
pacifier or thumb. Feeding your baby every time he needs to suck can lead to
obesity.
- Don't let the bottle or breast
become a security object at bedtime.
Your child should be able to go to sleep at night without
having a breast or bottle in her mouth. She needs to learn how to put
herself to sleep. If she doesn't, she will develop sleep problems that
require the parents' presence during the night.
- Don't let a bottle become a
daytime toy.
Don't let your child carry a bottle around as a companion
during the day. This habit may keep him from engaging in more stimulating
activities.
- Don't let your child hold the
bottle or take it to bed.
Your child should think of the bottle as something that
belongs to you; hence, she won't protest giving it up because it never
belonged to her in the first place.
- Offer your child formula or breast
milk in a cup by 6 months of age.
For the first few months your child will probably accept the
cup only after he has drunk some from the bottle or breast. However, by 9
months of age your child should be offered some formula or breast milk from
a cup before breast or bottle feedings.
Wean a baby younger than 6 months to a bottle and not to a
cup. Babies cannot drink well enough from a cup at this age to get enough
nourishment.
- Help your baby become interested
in foods other than formula or breast milk.
Introduce solids with a spoon by 4 months of age to
formula-fed babies and by 6 months to breast-fed infants. Finger foods can
be introduced between 9 and 10 months of age or whenever your child develops
a pincer grasp. As soon as your child can use finger foods, include her at
the table with the family during mealtime. She will probably become
interested in the foods that she sees you eating and will ask for them. As a
result, she will become more interested in having other foods as well as
formula or breast milk.