How old were your babies when they started to go longer between feedings? My DD is 7 weeks old and nurses every 2 hours during the day. She might stretch to 3-3.5 hours if she is in her sleeping in her car seat and we are out running errands. During the night she goes every 3 hours like clockwork, and I have adjusted and become used to it.
However, last night I nursed her at 10pm and then put her to bed. She didn't wake up and cry to nurse in her normal pattern. Finally at 3:45am (almost 6 hours later), I heard her gently stirring. I woke her up and fed her because our pediatrician said to not let her go more than 5 hours between feedings. When I asked for how long, she had said for a few months. Has anyone else been told that? Or is DD transitioning to longer stretches of time? What is the deal??? TIA.
Re: Questions for STMs who BF
Why did our paediatrician say that about waking her up? If she is healthy and gaining weight, let her sleep at night!!
I think the pediatrician said no more than 5 hours because of a drop in blood sugar could be dangerous. I have been googling like crazy and I haven't found anything to support that yet. I can understand in the first week or so, but not months... right?
Also, DD was 9lbs 15oz at birth, lost 10oz in the hospital, and by one week old was 10lbs 4oz. Then at two weeks she was over 11lbs, so weight gain is definitely not a problem. lol!
DS1 liked to nurse every 2-4 hours around the clock until after a year old. I have never heard advice to not let baby go 5 hours without eating. Unless baby has a health issue, his/her little body will wake when hungry. Babies have amazingly brilliant self-preserving natures that have served them since before clocks even existed, right?
As for your DD changing her pattern--that is totally normal. The only sure thing about babies is that they change. Enjoy the longer stretches while they last! If she starts waking up more frequently down the line, that is normal, too. Baby sleep lengths are not linear and are ever-changing. I'm a fan of letting baby "drive" and heeding his cues.
More Green For Less Green