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Dairy Introduction
Weaning is the process of introducing your baby to solid foods, and is also known as complementary feeding.
From birth to 6 months, breast milk (or formula) will provide a complete source of energy and all the other nutrients your baby needs.
Although breast milk or formula remains very important throughout early childhood, solids are required from 6 months to complement breast milk or formula as your baby’s requirements for nutrients are increasing. A child who is only taking breast milk or formula after 6 months of age may struggle to meet their requirements for key nutrients such as iron.
A varied/balanced diet including iron rich foods e.g. meat, eggs, pulses, energy rich foods like starchy carbohydrates and higher fat food alongside fruits and vegetables will support the energy and nutrient needs of your baby.
The introduction of solid food to infants in addition to breast milk or infant formula provides a range of important nutrients.
The Government and expert scientific groups in the UK recommend* babies start solids at around 6 months of age, and not before 17 weeks of age.
Remember, breast milk and formula milk can provide all the key nutrients for babies up to 6 months of age. It is encouraged that parents looks for developmental signs that a baby is developmentally ready to commence solids.
These signs of readiness include:
An infant will drink less breast milk/formula after the age of 6 months as you start to introduce solid foods. However, breast or formula milk remains an important source of nutrition in early childhood. For formula fed babies on a milk-free diet, using their prescribed special formula milk (Althera or Alfamino) in foods and recipes can help improve intake of both energy and key nutrients like calcium.
If you are breastfeeding you should continue to do so. (Only a very small number of babies will react to traces of cows’ milk protein from mother’s diet coming through in breast milk. If you have been advised to exclude milk from your diet whilst breastfeeding, make sure you discuss with your Dietitian and ensure guidance on your own diet and supplementation).
If your formula fed baby is having a cow’s milk formula with or without any breast milk, your healthcare professional will recommend that you stop the usual formula your baby is taking immediately and change straight over to your new specialist formula.
This will help with your baby’s symptoms. In some circumstances you may be able to gradually swap your baby onto the new formula milk by mixing the specialist formula and their old milk formula together and gradually increasing the proportion of the milk-free feed.
The UK guidelines recommend giving vitamins to babies from 6 months of age unless they are drinking more than 500ml of formula per day. If your baby is breastfed, they should have a daily Vitamin D supplement from birth. Breastfeeding mothers are also recommended to take 10ug Vitamin D daily too. A supplement containing vitamins A, C and D should continue until your child is 5 years old.
What texture?
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What texture?
How Much?
What texture?
How Much?