So my almost 6 mo little guy does not sleep through the night, which I am ok with; however, my pediatrician was very convicting when mentioning that he should be sttn by now. She stated that if he was still eating in the middle of the night that it was because I trained him to.
He is EBF, though some times he take a bottle of BM because I work full time. Either way, he generally wakes up 2-3 times a night. Generally I will re-position him to help get gas out or snuggle him back to sleep, but often he wants to nurse and he will not go back to sleep without eating. Again, I am ok with this, but my pediatrician insists that I am training him to want to eat at night.
Any experience with this? Is your LO sttn at 6 mo? Do they wake up to eat? Do I need to wean away from this? I am very pro baby led weaning and this just doesn't feel right to me.
Re: 5.5mo not sttn, pedi concerned?
If it ain't broke...
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I don't think pediatricians should give out sleep advice, unless your child has a medical reason for not sleeping.
My almost 14 month old doesn't STTN. He is up 2-5 times a night (a 12 hour period of time).
He still needs a boob for comfort, we are working on slowly breaking it but I never would have been comfortable night weaning him at your child's age.
DS born via unplanned C-section at 40w6d
Your pedi is wrong. LOs STTN when they are ready. My daughter still ate once a night until she was almost 18 months old.
Anyway, your pediatrician is there to offer medical advice not parenting advice.
Don't listen to your dr about this! Many babies don't STTN at that age. My almost 9 month old still wakes 1-2 times (last night 3) a night.
Many ppers said it - but definitely this! Your child's sleeping, when you offer food, when you choose to potty train, etc, etc are parenting decisions. If my doctor says something I disagree with I just nod my head and do what I was planning to do.
DD#1 was still waking twice a night to eat until 18months. If it works for you and DH, then don't worry about it. If it's causing issues, then maybe some sleep training would be a good idea. It's your call.
Micah Leonard
keep in mind that the medical definition of STTN is sleeping one six-hour stretch. So if you put LO to bed at 7 PM and the first wake-up is at 1 AM and all the rest are after that, then your LO is technically STTN.
Babies should be able to sleep one six-hour stretch without a feed at that age. So if that's not happening, it could be due to other reasons such as separation anxiety or other non-food related reasons, or it could just be habit. If you're OK with it, then it's OK. My DD is going through the same thing... for her, she used to STTN on her own, then we had a lot of things that disturbed her sleep (teething, bad cold, change of schedule) and had a ton of night wakeups... then it became clear that she was continuing the night wakeups out of habit, not need, I am using some night weaning tips to get her back to one 6 hour stretch. If you do this it does not have to involve CIO, I am doing it without.
For the record, the pedi defined sttn as 8-10 hrs. I do feel like it is a comfort thing for him. For example, if I just lay him back down he is playful and happy but won't go back to sleep. Eventually playful turns into grumpy so we nurse and he falls right asleep. I suppose maybe I should consider weaning, I am VERY tired. But I kind of expected this going into parenthood. I just don't feel ready to make a big deal about it.
I wouldn't be concerned but the pedi made it clear that I was hindering his ability to self soothe. He is a very independent little guy, often wanting to play by himself on his play mat or exersaucer. It's just in sleep that he requires so much comforting. It is reassuring and takes a lot of pressure off knowing that so many others are still not sttn night at older ages.
I think a lot of people who've had kids who wake up at night well into toddlerhood and beyond think oh, if only I had sleep trained at 6 months I wouldn't have this problem, and that is why they feel the need to push other parents into it. But IMO what's happening with sleep at 5 months has no bearing on what happens with sleep at 9 months, let alone age 2. They and their needs change so fast at this age. Just keep doing what feels right.
Exactly. But, it can interfere with getting enough to eat. And then weight gain suffers and then OH NO your milk supply must be low...time to feed formula! Sometimes you just have to let nature alone.
In a 1 month old I agree that this is a very valid concern. But in an almost 6 month old I see this as more of a common fear than real concern. To the OP I agree that many/most babies that age don't sleep the whole night; however, 6 months is a great time to start thinking about night weaning before sleep/feeding associations develop between 69 months.
I would take your pedi's advice as just that, advice. I think around 6 months my pedi started asking about STTN, and when I told her we were still nursing 2-3x a night, she said there was medically no reason he shouldn't be STTN. E just started STTN at 13 months, but we did have to night wean. I wasn't ready at 6 months, but was ready at 12. This is a parenting decision, so if you're ready to night wean / sleep train, take your pedi's words as advice that it is ok to start. If you're not ready, don't take the advice.
We did do Ferber around 6 months because E was up for 45 min to an hr with every wakeup, so I was getting zero sleep. There is a huge difference between being up for 10 min with each nursing session and being up for an hr.
I disagree. Waking most certainly affects the quality of sleep. And I must have abnormal children because both STTN with no training or cio - the first at 6wks and the second at 3 mos.
Those who say it's fine for a baby to not sttn complain the most over the course of the first year about lack of sleep. It's a baby and family health issue.
You have abnormal children. And I say this with utter affection, no snark.
Mine wasn't quite that early but she STTN around 56 months without CIO or formal sleep training. And she is still nursing and I donated over 1800oz of milk so no supply issues here. It is definitely possible!
Gee, how many hours of med school are dedicated to infant sleep?
Is it as many as breastfeeding?
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Med school isn't where you learn to be a pediatrician, residency is. Sleep is frequently discussed. Honestly, breastfeeding not as much. I think moms who really want to be successful should find a pediatrician who has done the same. I know how much of a priority it was for me and work really hard to do whatever I can to help moms have the same success. I just don't feel like EBF has to go hand in hand with poor sleep habits.
And I don't feel like doctors should preach sleep habits to happy families.
Mine doesn't. And she fully supports breastfeeding. Even breastfeeding a toddler while pregnant.
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