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Resources > Newborn > Nutrition > Introducing Solid Foods

 

Introducing Solid Foods

  


Introducing Solid Foods Is your baby ready for those first solid foods? Make sure the ones you're introducing are safe for his young digestive system.

After several months of breast or bottle feeding, infants digestive systems and their coordination have matured enough so that they can try out solid foods at around six months of age. Just as important as when we offer our babies solid foods, is how we do this.

"It's important to introduce foods slowly", explains nutritionist Anne Birks. "If you introduce one new food every four or five days that gives you the opportunity to really determine if the baby is having a problem from the food or not. In some cases it takes up to 72 hours before a reaction to a food is visible. Some of the symptoms could be eczema, cold like symptoms with a runny nose, watery eyes, and diarrhea. The foods that tend to be most allergenic are nuts, citrus fruits and egg white." Cows milk can also cause problems and according to Birks "it should not be introduced to a child until that baby is at least six months of age and is already receiving a variety of foods."

Pediatrician Dr. William James says there is a definite preference for which foods you should introduce first. "Most babies should start on cereals, particularly rice cereal, partly for the iron content and partly to settle them down so that they go longer periods of time between feedings." Dr. James adds that parents should start their infants on just a teaspoon of food and then gradually increase to three tablespoons once or even twice a day. "Most parents then go on to vegetables, then to the fruit and then subsequently meats, explains Dr. James.

And how much food is enough? Dr. James says that although there are no hard and fast rules, a good sign that your baby is eating well is a steady weight gain. "If a baby gains a half a pound a month from six months on, that's an adequate weight gain as this works out to four to six pounds a year. That's why parents whose children don't appear to be eating a lot but are making this steady weight gain needn't worry."





 
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alex

07:23 Jun 14

solid foods

donna en lisaaa..

07:38 Mar 05

Re: cow's milk and sucking and HE..

tasi

01:26 Mar 17

baby weight gain

mobolanle

04:10 Dec 06

articles

Britttany

03:34 Oct 24

Breastfeeding

Taryn

02:55 Jul 06

Re: not eating solids

cc

02:54 Jun 29

cow's milk and sucking and HELP i..

fawn

11:13 Mar 21

Re: you all suck

Mrs. Gibson

09:54 Oct 08

Re: not eating solids

Helen

01:51 Mar 10

Re: you all suck

bob

04:22 Feb 09

Re: you all suck

bob

04:21 Feb 09

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terry

05:05 Oct 19

Re: WEIGHT GAIN

ET

07:51 Jun 18

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Tawny

07:36 Apr 10

severe voming

Anita

12:25 Jan 21

not eating solids

Jenny

08:51 Jul 30

WEIGHT GAIN

ABEBA TESFAY

05:01 May 31



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