I am a bit confused about when to introduce solids and why.
As background, my LO was born at 32 weeks. He is 15.5 weeks old, but 8 weeks adjusted. I use his adjusted age for any major developmental milestones and growth charts although we do use his actual age for some things (example: his vaccination schedule follows his actual age since immune system readiness is more closely tied to his time on earth).
My pediatrician mentioned babies are started on rice cereal at 4 months and other solids at 6. She seemed to think my LO should start cereal in a few days (he will be 4 months old but only 2 months corrected).
I have no intention of starting him on cereal and, had he been full term, I would have stuck to exclusively breastfeeding until 6 months as per the WHO recommendations.
However, that issue aside, I am now confused about when I should introduce solids.
From what I have read, the recommendation to introduce solids at 6 months has to do with both digestive readiness as well as the baby's iron stores depleting around this time. However, what does one do in the case of a preemie?
His iron stores are likely to run out at 6 months (or earlier since he wasn't term) but his digestive tract would still lack the maturity a normal 6 month old would. He would need to be closer to 8 months to have the same maturity as a term baby.
Does anyone have experience with this or any suggested reading?
I will be talking to my pediatrician again about this but I would like to come more fully prepared to the next appointment. Her suggestion caught me off guard.
Re: Solid foods
https://www.healthychildren.org/English/ages-stages/baby/feeding-nutrition/Pages/Switching-To-Solid-Foods.aspx
Yes, I think giving babies cereal at 4 months is outdated info. It did shake my confidence in my pediatrician, particularly since she suggested it for him at what should be two months of age. A fellow NICU mom was told the same thing by her pediatrician.
What I may suggest at my next visit is that LO's iron levels be tested. He took iron drops from 32-40 weeks but hasn't had any since then (although I still have the drops handy). If his stores are running low, I would rather supplement iron than force him to eat solids before he is ready.
It's definitely reinforced my decision to wait on solids and watch for readiness cues.
This is one of my pet peeves about advice from your doctor. So many times people put complete faith in their medical professional and so, so many times I've found their advice to be contradictory to what modern guidelines and research advises. It sucks that you can't just trust what you're told.