Transitioning Formulas

Transitioning Formulas

The process of transitioning from one formula to another should be done under the guidance of your child’s pediatrician.

There are many reasons you might change your child’s formula. Some of them aren’t medical at all. The price may simply go up on the one you’re using and you decide to switch to a less expensive brand. For the purpose of this discussion, I’m going to focus on the medical reasons. I’ve listed some common medical reasons below.

  1. Gas / Fussiness
  2. Mucousy stool
  3. Bloody stool
  4. Vomiting / Poor weight gain
  5. Constipation
  6. Diarrhea

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The Difficulties of Breastfeeding, a Special Needs Perspective

In honor of breastfeeding support week, I would like to share this with all of you. I wrote it a good while ago and decided to shelf it indefinitely. I think I’ve come to a place where I’m finally comfortable sharing. Enjoy!

Let me start by saying, a lot of people in the previous two generations do not understand breastfeeding. They bought in to the sales pitch that formula is better for your child. They believe bottles are better than the breast. The first time your child seems to struggle (even if only a little) being breastfed, the overwhelming response is that shoving a bottle of formula in their mouth will make everything better.

In order to balance this out, others have gone to the extreme to claim breastfeeding is best in all cases. There is never a situation where formula needs to be given, and if you give your child formula you’re denying them the chance to bond with you fully. The truth is in between, as is usually the case. There are situations where children need to be fed formulas. I didn’t know this when we started on our journey with our son, but there are formulas designed to help children with medical needs such as difficulty digesting and unknown allergies.

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