Is combination feeding good for baby
Mixed feeding | Pregnancy Birth and Baby
Mixed feeding | Pregnancy Birth and Baby beginning of content7-minute read
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Key facts
- Mixed feeding is when your baby is fed formula and breastmilk.
- Regular mixed feeding can interfere with your milk supply.
- Sometimes there are good reasons to consider mixed feeding. These include breastfeeding problems and a baby with a low weight.
What is mixed feeding?
Mixed feeding is when your baby is fed formula as well as breastmilk.
Some parents decide to start mixed feeding and combine breastfeeding and bottle feeds. This can be for a range of reasons.
Mixed feeding can involve:
- breastfeeding and giving your baby formula
- breastfeeding and giving your baby a combination of expressed breast milk and formula
- breastfeeding and giving your baby donor breastmilk
- bottle feeding expressed breast milk, formula, and/or donor milk
Regular mixed feeding with formula can make breastfeeding more challenging as it can interfere with your milk supply. Some babies may start to prefer drinking from a bottle.
The way you feed your baby is a personal choice. You may choose to feed your baby just expressed breastmilk as you prefer to feed using a bottle.
It’s a good idea to talk to a health professional if you are thinking about introducing formula.
From birth your baby needs to be fed regularly to have good weight gains. Newborns need to feed about every 2 to 3 hours (8 to 12 times in a 24-hour period).
Why might I think about mixed feeding?
Although exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months is the ideal start for your baby, there are reasons why you may consider mixed feeding. These may include:
- issues with breastfeeding
- low breastmilk supply
- baby with a low weight
Issues with breastfeeding
Sometimes breastfeeding can be challenging (it’s important to remember that you and your baby are learning). Some of the challenges can include:
- having sore, cracked or bleeding nipples
- painful, blocked ducts in your breasts
- mastitis — an inflammation of your breast that can cause pain and flu-like symptoms
- oral thrush and/or breast and nipple thrush
- nipple vasospasm — where the blood vessels in your nipple tighten and go into a spasm, preventing blood from flowing normally
- inverted or flat nipples — consider getting advice from a professional about trying a nipple shield
- difficulty with baby attaching to your breast — this can often be resolved with positioning and attachment advice or it could be due to issues such as tongue-tie, or a cleft palate
- your baby becoming 'fussy' at the breast or refusing to feed
- being uncomfortable about breastfeeding in a public
- returning to work — while some people successfully combine breastfeeding with returning to work, others may prefer not to
You can get help for many of these issues. This might allow you to continue breastfeeding or return to exclusive breastfeeding.
If you are having troubles breastfeeding, get support early. Talk to your midwife, child health nurse or organise a visit with a lactation consultant.
If you decide to move to mixed feeding, getting support can help you to continue with some breastfeeding as well.
Low breastmilk supply
You might worry that you don’t have enough breastmilk for your baby. Low milk supply may be temporary. Many people can build up their milk supply with the right help and support.
There are different things you can do to increase the amount of breastmilk you are producing. The best way to establish a healthy supply of breast milk is to start breastfeeding frequently. Make sure your baby is latching on correctly and emptying your breasts. Make sure you ask for help from a health professional.
Your baby’s weight and other measurements are recorded in your baby’s health record book. This helps check your baby’s health, growth and development against what is expected.
Signs that your baby is getting enough milk (after the first week of birth) include:
- 6 to 8 wet nappies (4 to 5 heavy disposable nappies) in a 24-hour period
- having 8 to 12 breastfeeds in 24-hours
- passing soft yellow poo (3 to 4 times a day if younger than 6 to 8 weeks)
- settling and sleeping between most feeds
- is back to birth weight in about 2 weeks
- gaining on average 150g or more every week for their first 3 months
A small number of people may have low supply due to: previous breast surgery, not having enough breast tissue or another medical reason. You may be able to produce some breastmilk and choose mixed feeding for your baby with donor milk or formula.
Baby with low weight
A parent who is considering mixed feeding may be worried that their baby is losing or not gaining enough weight. All babies grow differently, and their weight may change at different times.
Depending on the situation, a health professional might suggest that you need to introduce supplementary feeds for your baby. You can often give your baby expressed breastmilk or you may begin mixed feeding with formula.
Sometimes a lower baby weight is nothing to be concerned about and only lasts for a short period of time due to a temporary milk supply or feeding issue.
Your health professional may say that your baby will benefit from mixed feeding if they were: born very prematurely (earlier than 32 weeks), had a very low birth weight (less than 1,500g), is unwell or has a medical condition.
How do I move from mixed feeding to breastfeeding?
If you are planning to increase breastfeeding again after mixed feeding, it’s important to keep up your breastmilk supply. Your healthcare professionals or one of the organisations listed below can help support you to do this.
Where can I get more help?
It's important to know that many breastfeeding and baby weight gain issues can be solved with the help of someone skilled in breastfeeding support.
You can call Pregnancy, Birth and Baby on 1800 882 436 to speak to a maternal child health nurse. Alternatively, you can contact:
- a registered lactation consultant
- your maternal child health nurse
- your midwife
- your doctor
- the Australian Breastfeeding Association Breastfeeding Helpline: 1800 686 268 (1800 mum 2 mum)
Depending on your circumstances and your baby's age, they can advise you on:
- how much formula to give your baby
- how many times a day to give formula
- when to move back to exclusive breastfeeding, if relevant
Speak to a maternal child health nurse
Call Pregnancy, Birth and Baby to speak to a maternal child health nurse on 1800 882 436 or video call. Available 7am to midnight (AET), 7 days a week.
Sources:
Council of Australian Governments (COAG) Health Council (Australian National Breastfeeding Strategy 2019 and beyond), Australian Breastfeeding Association (Mixed feeding), The Royal Women’s Hospital (Breastfeeding problems), Royal Women's Hospital (Low milk supply)Learn more here about the development and quality assurance of healthdirect content.
Last reviewed: September 2022
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How to combine breast and bottle feeding
It can take several weeks for you and your baby to feel happy and confident with breastfeeding.
Once you've both got the hang of it, it's usually possible to offer your baby bottles of expressed milk or formula alongside breastfeeding.
This is sometimes called mixed or combination feeding.
Why combine breast and bottle?
You may want to combine breastfeeding with bottle feeding if you:
- are breastfeeding and want to use a bottle to offer your baby some expressed breast milk
- want to breastfeed for some of your baby's feeds, but give bottles of formula for 1 or more feeds
- are bottle feeding your baby and want to start breastfeeding
- need to leave your baby and want to make sure they have some milk while you're away
Introducing formula feeds can affect the amount of breast milk you produce. There is also a small amount of evidence to show babies may not breastfeed as well because they learn to use a different kind of sucking action at the bottle than at the breast.
These things can make breastfeeding more difficult, especially in the first few weeks when you and your baby are still getting comfortable with breastfeeding.
Your breastmilk supply will usually not be affected if you start bottle feeding your baby when they are a bit older, you are both comfortable with breastfeeding, and you breastfeed every day.
Introducing formula feeds
If you're combining breastfeeding with formula feeds both you and your baby can carry on enjoying the benefits of breastfeeding.
If you choose to introduce infant formula:
- it's best to do it gradually to give your body time to reduce the amount of milk it makes – this helps lower your chance of getting uncomfortable, swollen breasts, or mastitis
- if you're going back to work, start a few weeks beforehand to give both of you time to readjust
- if your baby is 6 months old or more and can drink milk from a cup, you may not need to introduce a bottle at all
For more information, see drinks and cups for babies.
Giving your baby their first bottle
It may take a while for a breastfed baby to get the hang of bottle feeding, because they need to use a different sucking action.
- it usually helps to give the first few bottles when your baby is happy and relaxed – not when they're very hungry
- it may help if someone else gives the first bottle feeds, so that your baby is not near you and smelling your breast milk
- you might want to try using a different position for bottle and breastfeeding
See more advice on how to bottle feed.
Restarting breastfeeding
If you want to start breastfeeding more and give your baby fewer bottles, it's a good idea to ask your midwife, health visitor or breastfeeding supporter for support.
These tips may help too:
- Hold and cuddle your baby as much as possible, ideally skin to skin. This will encourage your body to make milk and your baby to feed.
- Express your breast milk regularly. Expressing releases the hormone prolactin, which stimulates your breasts to make milk. About 8 times a day, including once at night is ideal. It may be easier to express by hand to begin with – your midwife, health visitor or breastfeeding supporter can show you how.
- Try bottlefeeding while holding your baby skin to skin and close to your breasts.
- If your baby is latching on, feed little and often. Do not worry if your baby does not feed for long to begin with. See tips on how to get your baby properly positioned and attached.
- Choose times when your baby is relaxed, alert and not too hungry, and do not force your baby to stay at the breast.
- Decrease the number of bottles gradually, as your milk supply increases.
- Consider using a lactation aid (supplementer). A tiny tube is taped next to your nipple and passes into your baby's mouth so your baby can get milk via the tube as well as from your breast. This helps to support your baby as they get used to attaching to the breast. Your midwife, health visitor or breastfeeding supporter can give you more information.
See more tips on boosting your milk supply.
Help and support with mixed feeding
If you have any questions or concerns about combining breast and bottle feeding:
- talk to your midwife, health visitor or breastfeeding supporter
- call the National Breastfeeding Helpline on 0300 100 0212 (9.30am to 9.30pm, every day)
- find breastfeeding support near you
Video: why combine breast and bottle feeding?
In this video, 3 mothers discuss ways to combine breast and bottle feeding.
Media last reviewed: 22 March 2020
Media review due: 22 March 2023
Page last reviewed: 8 October 2019
Next review due: 8 October 2022
Whether to give water to a child with mixed feeding
Co-author, editor and medical expert - Klimovich Elina Valerievna.
Views: 42 648
The date of the last update: 27.12.2022 G.
Average reading time: 4 minutes
Content
Give or not give: two points of view for one question
When is it necessary to give water
What kind of water can be given to a child
How to give water to a child
How much water can be given to a child breastfed babies do not need. However, some still have a question: should I give water with mixed feeding? In this article we will try to answer this vital question. nine0003
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To give or not to give: two points of view on the same question
Some experts believe that formula-fed and breastfed babies do not need water. After all, breast milk is already 90% water, and besides, the artificial mixture is diluted with a sufficient amount of liquid during the preparation of the mother. On the other hand, many pediatricians believe that all babies should be offered water, regardless of what type of feeding they are on, explaining this by preventing increased intracranial pressure, dehydration and constipation. Some pediatricians have come to the conclusion that babies may confuse hunger with thirst. And if, instead of satisfying it, the child, feeding him on demand, is given only breast milk or formula, overweight can be provoked. There is a way out of this situation. If the child, after feeding a standard portion, after a while begins to show anxiety and act up, as if he wants to eat again, he can be offered some water. In most cases, he will quickly calm down after that. However, parents need to know that water is given only after meals (after about 40 minutes), and not before it, because in this case the child may experience a feeling of false satiety. nine0003
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When is it necessary to give water
There are a number of situations when it is absolutely necessary to give water to a baby.
- At elevated body temperature . It can be caused by various reasons: exposure to the open sun, a fever-producing illness, etc. To prevent dehydration, the child should be offered water. Breast milk and artificial formula in this case will not be able to fully compensate for the loss of fluid. nine0061
- For diarrhea or vomiting. These conditions also cause dehydration. In addition, a sick child may lose his appetite and refuse to eat. In this case, a newborn or an older child must be given water to drink.
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What kind of water can be given to a child
Some mothers believe that ordinary tap water can be given to a baby after boiling it well for 2-3 minutes. This is acceptable, but it is still better to purchase special drinking water for children in pharmacies and children's stores. Unlike boiled, it is considered more useful, because it has the optimal composition for the child's body. nine0003
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How to Give Water to Your Baby
Most moms prefer bottled water. But it happens that the child does not suck it very well. Of course, you should not force the baby to drink, but with a serious threat of dehydration, it is still necessary to replenish the volume of lost fluid. Then you can try to give water from a spoon or make an unsaturated compote of dried fruits (apples and prunes), which will be not only tasty, but also healthy. The main thing is not to add sugar or syrup to it. In addition, this drink has a slight laxative effect, so it is especially useful for constipation. nine0003
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How much water can be given to a child
The amount of liquid is not strictly limited. So, in the heat, babies under the age of six months can drink up to 100 ml per day.
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Should I give my baby water at night? Drinking water should be at room temperature. It should be given in portions. In the case of a high fever, the child should be offered water approximately every 30–90 minutes.
The question of whether to give water to a mixed-fed baby is a compromise. Therefore, you should not go to extremes, but offer liquid to the baby based on his needs and general well-being.
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The information in this article is for reference only and does not replace professional medical advice. For diagnosis and treatment, contact a qualified specialist.
Find out what should be included in a newborn's first aid kit in our video:
Mixed feeding: when it is necessary and how to organize it
Introduce and stop formula feeding gradually, focusing on the baby's weight gain
How do you know if a baby needs to be fed? What to consider when choosing a mixture? How to maintain lactation and when to stop supplementary feeding? We answer common questions from parents about mixed feeding together with Olga Lukoyanova, MD, pediatrician, neonatologist, leading researcher at the Healthy and Sick Child Nutrition Laboratory of the National Medical Research Center for Children's Health. nine0024
When mixed feeding is recommended
The reasons for introducing supplementary foods may vary, but the main one is the lack of mother's milk. There are other situations where this is necessary, but they are much less common. Sometimes an allergy in an infant, frequent regurgitation, constipation is considered a sufficient reason for mixed feeding, but this is not the case. By themselves, these conditions are not yet a reason to introduce supplementary feeding - often these problems can be solved by changing the diet of the mother or prescribing medication to the mother or child. nine0003
Only in very rare cases (for example, a combination of constipation in a child and a lack of milk in a mother) do you have to introduce a medicinal mixture as a supplement. There are also very rare hereditary diseases (for example, phenylketonuria and other metabolic disorders) when it is really necessary to find the right combination of breast milk and a suitable therapeutic formula.
Not a single, even the most modern, adapted milk formula can be a complete replacement for mother's milk - it is, by and large, irreplaceable. Therefore, supplementary feeding is introduced only when all the ways to stimulate lactation have been exhausted and there are obvious signs of a lack of breast milk. nine0003
The main guideline is weight gain
How can you tell if a mother is really low on milk? This is a medical problem that should be addressed to a pediatrician or neonatologist. He will listen to the mother's complaints, weigh the child, evaluate his behavior and the dynamics of weight gain. By the way, in 2019, at the initiative of the Union of Pediatricians of Russia, a Program was created to optimize the feeding of children in the first year of life. A whole section of this document approved by the Ministry of Health is devoted to how to understand that a child is not getting enough mother's milk and when supplementary feeding is introduced. nine0003
The big problem is the too early and unreasonable introduction of supplementary feeding in the maternity hospital (on the first or third day after birth). However, it should not be administered when the child is crying and seems to be hungry.
In the first few days after birth, breast milk is often not enough. But if the mother is constantly next to the baby, often puts it to the breast and feeds on demand, then lactation is quickly getting better and supplementary feeding is usually not needed.
After discharge from the maternity hospital, the mother is left alone with her baby and, as a rule, is especially worried about his nutrition. But in the first days and weeks, the child naturally loses weight, and this does not mean at all that there is not enough milk. According to WHO experts, body weight can return to what it was at birth only by the end of the second week of life. nine0003
You can understand that there is not enough milk, for example, by the color of the baby's urine - normally it should be light, not concentrated. Another indicator is the number of bowel movements: they should be at least 4-6 per day. But the most reliable way to find out if the baby has enough mother's milk is regular weighing. Scales for newborns do not have to be bought, they can be rented - this will save money and reduce parental anxiety.
The baby should be weighed without clothes and a diaper at the same time of day. There is no need to do this before and after feeding - he can suck out different amounts of milk at a time. It is better to track the weight once a day, every 3 days, or even once a week. nine0003
For the first month, the minimum required is an increase of 25–30 g per day from the second week of life, or 400–600 g of birth weight. If during this time the child gained less than 400 g, then supplementary feeding should be introduced.
At the same time, it is necessary to continue to stimulate lactation, to put the baby to the breast as often as possible and try to keep mother's milk as the basis of the diet, and also to continue weighing the baby. If in the second month of life the increase is 180–200 g per week, then supplementary feeding is not needed. nine0003
At the age of 3-6 months, the rate of weight gain decreases to 120-130 g per week. In addition to weight dynamics, pay attention to other signs. If the child is often worried, rarely urinates, and at the same time the urine is concentrated, saturated in color, resume weighing once a day and share your concerns with the pediatrician.
How to choose the right milk formula
All formulas on the market are certified to be as close as possible to breast milk, adapted to the needs of babies, fortified with essential substances and similar in composition. To understand what kind of mixture a child needs for supplementary feeding, it is important to remember the features of his development. If there are no complaints, but the mother has little milk, then, in principle, the parents themselves can choose any milk formula for healthy children. nine0003
However, if there are complaints (regurgitation, constipation, allergies, colic), then a doctor will help you choose a special therapeutic mixture. After all, even ordinary, it would seem, infantile constipation can have different causes - for example, allergies. And in this case, even a therapeutic mixture for constipation will be useless. Therefore, first you need to find out the cause of the problem, and only then select a mixture that will help eliminate it.
Sometimes parents try to find the right formula for their baby by changing brands. However, firstly, the effect of introducing a new formula becomes noticeable no earlier than after 2 weeks. Secondly, mixtures of the same type (for example, for healthy children in the first six months of life or against colic and constipation) are almost identical in composition, regardless of the brand. Mixtures for different purposes from the same manufacturer differ much more from each other. Therefore, instead of changing brands, you need to look for a solution to the problem together with a specialist. nine0003
How to maintain lactation with mixed feeding
To prevent the milk from "leaking", formula should be given only after the baby is attached to the breast. To prevent a baby from switching to a pacifier, alternative methods of supplementary feeding are sometimes offered - for example, feeding from a spoon or through a drinking bowl. This approach can be applied to older children, especially if the proportion of complementary foods in the diet is small. But if the child is small, and the mixture is, for example, 50% of the daily ration or more, then it is still more convenient to supplement it from a bottle with a nipple. And so that the baby does not wean from the breast, it must be applied to it as often as possible - both day and night. nine0003
Of course, there is a risk of reduced lactation - studies show that the introduction of supplementary foods reduces the success of breastfeeding. But here it is important not to fall into another vicious circle: if a mother is very worried that she does not have enough milk, and the child is really screaming from hunger, then there will be even less milk. Therefore, it is better to introduce supplementary feeding for this period, calm down, continue to stimulate lactation, achieve stable weight gain in the baby, and then begin the gradual abolition of supplementary feeding.
How to correctly calculate the amount of mix
The amount of supplementation depends on the mother's milk production, the age and weight of the baby, so there are no clear recommendations here. First of all, you need to focus on the condition and well-being of the child after feeding. For example, a 1-month-old baby may start with 10 ml (2 teaspoons) of supplementary feeding after breastfeeding, older children may need 30 ml.
After feeding, observe the condition of the baby: if he behaves calmly, then the mixture is enough and next time you can give the same amount. If the child is restless, you can gradually increase the amount of the mixture and control weight gain. It is not necessary to supplement the baby with each breastfeed - as a rule, it is enough to do this 2-3 times a day. nine0003
Supplementary feeding should be canceled in time
Supplementary feeding should remain a temporary phenomenon, therefore, against the background of its introduction, lactation should be continued to be stimulated: often attach the baby to the breast, use special thermal pads on the breast before feeding, drink a hot drink before feeding, do contrast pouring over the breast area.