English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Also, any links to websites regarding the information that I am seeking would be helpfull, Thanks.

2007-08-29 14:36:09 · 16 answers · asked by Lisa D 2 in Pregnancy & Parenting Newborn & Baby

16 answers

My mother says for milk that between 16-24 ounces a day is good but no more. She says that there are some formulas that you can give for toddlers that age but to only give a bottle in the morning for the nutrients and the rest of the day for milk.
Now at the WIC office they tell you to have the child on whole milk by the age of one and also that they should be on the sippy cup also by then. My daughter didn't like the sippy cup at first but gradually within a few months got used to it.
My daughter has 1-2 sippy cups of milk a day...too much can constipate and then she has water and non caffenated pop..but the pop is once in awhile. I can't give her juice due to it causing rashes but if you can I would do a variety of milk, juice and water.

2007-08-29 16:24:28 · answer #1 · answered by shortysml 4 · 0 1

A 15 month old usually drinks whole milk by now . The doctor told me no more then 2 glasses of whole milk a day.

2007-08-29 14:42:38 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

After 12 months they no longer need formula, just whole milk. 16 ounces of whole milk per day is the recommended amount.

2007-08-29 15:24:42 · answer #3 · answered by MamaB 3 · 0 0

By 15 months your child should only be drinking whole milk, and our pediatrician told me to try giving my son only24 ounces of fluids (milk, juice, water) per day. If your child is given more fluids they will tend not to eat solids as well as they should and at this age its very important that they are eating their meats, fruits, veges, ect and not just "drinking" theirs meals like they did while on formula.

2007-08-29 14:45:06 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

that's carefully accepted sweety. your little one is ingesting greater sturdy ingredients which keeps her comprehensive for an prolonged quantity of time. dont tension her to drink the formula if she doesnt like it because of the fact this would reason an ingesting illness whilst she gets older, and make her think of she has to eat whilst she isnt hungry. if she doesnt want the bottle merely positioned it interior the refrigerator and take a inspect returned in approximately an hour or so. as long as she hasnt drank from the bottle then it particularly is secure interior the refrigerator for twenty-four hours. you additionally can try giving her juice rather of the formula if she refuses the bottle. the pediatrician recommends 6 oz. of fruit juice an afternoon, and as continuously 0.5 juice 0.5 water. dont difficulty too lots on the subject of the formula as she would be waiting to be thoroughly off it in a month besides. stable luck and that i'm hoping this helped.

2016-11-13 19:55:52 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A 15 month old does not need formula any longer. Whole milk is fine.

2007-08-29 14:42:33 · answer #6 · answered by sharkyincanada 6 · 0 0

By the time your child is 1 they should be on whole milk only. That is what my pediatrician told me. I will look it up for you though....here we go...
http://www.robynsnest.com/bottlefeeding1yr.htm

By one year of age, your baby no longer needs to rely on Formula or bottles. If you have not begun to wean your baby from the bottle, now is a good time to start. See Weaning Your Baby. You will probably have begun introducing solid foods at around 4 months of age and your child is likely to be on a regular schedule of meals and naps. See Introducing Solids and How Much Sleep.

Your child's nutrition is no longer based on formula and it is fine to begin giving whole milk in its place. Children need the fat contained in whole milk. Reduced fat milk products may inhibit your child's growth. Milk fat and other extra calories enable the tremendous amount of growth, developmental milestones and energy for your baby's rapidly changing body.

2007-08-29 14:42:10 · answer #7 · answered by BumbleBee 4 · 0 0

Unless the child has special dietary needs, s/he should not be drinking formula.

A toddler should get about sixteen ounces of milk a day, and no more than four ounces of juice. All other fluid intake should be water.

If you have any concerns you should discuss them with your pediatrician, who can give you appropriate nutritional guidelines for your child.

2007-08-29 14:49:17 · answer #8 · answered by Meghan H 3 · 2 0

I am not sure that formula is enough nutrition for a 15 month old. Toddlers need to be eating solid food. Do you mean formula in addition to regular meals?

2007-08-29 14:42:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Don't just remain there! Do squats while cleaning your teeth, calf raises although standing in line, or lunges while chatting within the phone.

2016-05-30 21:49:08 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers