
My DS had his blood drawn this week and the pedi told us that he is borderline anemic which is something I had been worried about. He loves dairy products (milk, cheese, yogurt, cottage cheese), fruit, and puffs... and that's about it. Everything else he eats very little of. He'll take 2-3 bites and be done with beans, meats, veggies, etc. He refuses cereals too. I am worried though as I just recovered from anemia from a m/c and I know how awful it is. I am going to start giving him a daily vitamin with iron but need help!
Anyone else dealing with this? Any suggestions? What iron-rich foods do you give your LO?
Re: Borderline Anemic
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Can you try mixing some baby oatmeal with yogurt. It is like powder so it mixes well.
Also tofu, black strap molasses, raisins, prunes,figs, apricots.
Good luck, hope the Iron levels sort themselves out, have you considered the Polyvisol with iron pedi drops..? our lil guy still gets those at 15 months once a day in his drink.
My little guy's iron is low too and we've started the polyvisol drops with iron. He's picky and doesn't like meat either, so the pedi suggested grinding meat up in the food processor and adding it to any sauce that you make. Also, an important thing to remember is that calcium blocks the absorption of iron and vitamin c enhances it - so don't give iron rich foods with dairy products (like yogurt) and try giving them with things like strawberries. We usually wait an hour after he's had any dairy to give him his drops and then give him a vitamin c rich snack with the drops, and then wait a couple hours to give him dairy again.
He gets rechecked in a couple months at his 15 mo appt and I'm hoping his levels will be back to normal.
Thank you everyone for all the ideas, I think I learned quite a bit and got some really great ways to help him with his iron deficiency.
I did not know cheerios were so good in iron until today so I'm planning on using those more for snacks instead puffs and maybe adding a little bit of baby cereal into his yogurt, see how he takes it. I also made him a smoothie today with spinach and he drank it pretty good. I am planning on making those regularly! And I will definitely look into drops and separating dairy from iron-rich foods. Thanks again for all your help!
Married 8/27/2011
BFP #1 9/28/2011 DS born 5/22/2012
BFP #2 4/24/2013 m/c 4/25/2013 at 4w
BFP #3 1/31/2014 DD born 10/14/2014
BFP #4 1/20/2016 m/c 2/12/2014 at 7w2d
BFP #5 8/19/2016 DS2 born 4/29/2017
BFP #6 3/7/2018 EDD 11/18/2018
DD had low iron at her 9 month check up (level 8 maybe? supposed to be at 11 or higher) and pedi said to use iron drops, but DD HATED them (and I don't blame her - they smelled like pennies).
We did lots of iron rich foods - steamed spinach, broccoli, kale, lots of cheerios. We made smoothies for her with kale and spinach which she loved. I made pancakes with prune juice and apricots. Also, vitamin C rich foods help the body absorb iron - so try mixing in some high vitamin C foods too. LO loved smoothies made with kale, blue/strawberries, pineapple, and a little prune juice.
We made sure she got iron rich foods at least twice a day (but we shot for every meal) and sure enough, at her 1 yr check up, her iron levels were up and the nurse said "keep doing what you're doing - it's working" :-)
Here are some good foods to try:
- meat (of any kind, but especially lean red meats)
- leafy greens
- beans
- lentils (we made lentil stew and LO ate it up)
- broccoli, asparagus, Brussels sprouts, other green veggies
- black strap molasses
- apricots, prunes, dates (we found a recipe for prune juice jello made with molasses and LO loved it too)
- any Iron-fortified cereal, oatmeal, pasta