We just had our two month appt and wanted to share something interesting from my pedi on helping LO sleep through the night.
He said once babies are 12 lbs they don't nutritionally need the feeding to be every 3-4 hours at night so after the big last feeding at night I should gradually start to reduce the amount I feed him the rest of the night. So if I give in 4oz I should bring it down to 3.5 then to 3 then to 2 and so on. He said basically this will signal the baby that I don't really need food and they start to soothe them selves back to sleep and drop the feeding as their body adjusts to the small feedings.
I thought that was very interesting. Anyone's pedi share similar tips on STTN?
Re: STTN tips from my pedi
Our pedi didn't give us any tips. I'm just going with the flow.
XoXo
Sarah
BFP#1 10/24/11 EDD 07/01/11 DD1 6/29/11
BFP#2 07/26/12 EDD 03/21/13 M/C(mmc6wk)09/04/12 @~11w
BFP#3 02/08/13 EDD 10/22/13 M/C(mmc6wk)03/11/13 @~8w
BFP#4 06/05/13 EDD 02/19/14 DD2 02/05/14
I'm just happy my baby wakes up, honestly.
I don't know if I will give him less food just to get him to sleep yet but he barely sleeps during the day and if I count he does not seem to be getting his 10-12 hours min sleep which is concerning.
While these guidelines *may* work for some babies, I'm willing to bet good money it's based on FFing as norm if anything. IMO these things are parenting advice, not medical fact and shouldn't be stated as hard/fast rules.
LO1 didn't stop night nursing until 18m, when I pushed him to wean. Granted, he did not likely NEED to eat, but I'm betting he was thirsty (as he started asking for water after weaning). And wanted comfort. There is no way in hell you can convince me there is medical evidence that a baby doesn't need to eat overnight based on weight alone. LO2 is 12lbs and only 7wks old. I cannot imagine NOT nursing her for 8hrs if she was waking to nurse. Besides the fact that it's 100% normal for newborns to need night feeds, all babies mature/develop at their own rate so to say x weight is hard cut off is ridiculous.
ETA: she was asking if anyone else had a pedi give similar advice. Not telling everyone she had the magical STTN answer.
BFP #1 5.26.08 DD born 1.4.09
BFP #2 3.11.12 m/c 3.26.12
BFP #3 10.7.12 m/c 10.27.12
BFP #4 2.24.13 ectopic MTX 3.13.13 Right tube removed 3.29.13
BFP #5 5.27.13 DS born 1.22.14
BFP #6 4.14.16
I just was curious on the theory my pedi suggested on reducing feed during the night and if others had tried it. Of course if he wakes up and is hungry even after the reduced feed I am giving him what he needs but if this strategy helps him (and me) sleep well at night I am going to give it a try.
I don't really get how weight factors into this?
dx PCOS 2007
BFP #1 (natural) 12/23/2010. Stillbirth due to IC 4/2/2011
TTC #2 starting 03/2012
RE starting 07/2012
05/2013 BFP on a Letrozole (Femara)/trigger!
Cerclage, Procardia, Makena, GD (with insulin), MBR, and we made it!
Our Angel was born sleeping at 20 weeks due to IC.
He gave me an example that if I got up to eat a mid night snack everyday at 2 am in due course I will automatically feel hungry at 2 am everyday as my body now knows I get the snack. It's the same with babies that they are accustomed to that MOTN snack. So basically if baby gets considerable nutrition during night feeding he will wake up regardless of weight to wake up. If I reduce that, then his body adjusts over time. Some babies eventually do it on their own some don't. It's just a way of trying to help them get there if indeed they are not sleeping well.
Again I am not saying this is the way to go but it's an interesting approach. It was a suggested measure and wanted to share with others here in case anyone had tried successfully.
In our house, a crappy restless or no nap day plays hell at night time!
I breastfeed so it's hard to measure exact amount given obviously but a couple of times I've given more of a quick feed if LO wakes up at 6am bc I want him to eat again around 7 or 8. When he was younger (weighed less?) this didn't work but now he will take the quick feed and go back to sleep for an hour or two. Like everything though, I'm sure this depends on the baby
I don't think 12 lbs is or should be a hard line, but I also think that the number of 6 month olds who still eat in the middle of the night is unnecessary. It's helpful to know when a baby is safe to sleep through the night, and that there is no medical reason to continue it past a certain point - although you're certainly welcome to make your own decisions on the topic