There are a few reasons why your little one may be refusing to take the bottle and thankfully there are a few things you can try to end the strike.
Baby bottle milk strike.
The bottle ring helps stabilise the pressure inside the bottle for optimal feeding and flow rate.
A baby who is truly ready to wean will almost always do so gradually over a period of weeks or months.
And if the milk is too cold the baby will not want to.
Like most phases babies and children go through this too shall pass.
That room temperature milk will end up being too cold for the baby by the time you actually sit down to give the bottle.
If the bottle ring is screwed on too tightly air can t enter the bottle and balance the pressure inside which makes it very difficult for your baby to extract milk through suction.
If your baby has been getting the occasional bottle and needs to continue it can help to keep them to a minimum and to have someone other than mom do any.
She doesn t want to be bottle fed.
We started offering her a bottle every day around 3 weeks i d also disagree with the usual 6 weeks advice if breastfeeding is going well i d say it is often safe to offer a bottle sooner and many of my friends never got the baby to take a bottle when they started that late.
If your baby or toddler has been breastfeeding well and suddenly refuses to nurse it is probably what is called a nursing strike rather than a signal that it s time to wean.
A baby bottle strike can be frustrating and worrisome.
You might feel rejected and frustrated.
We also had a bottle strike around 2 5 months.
A breast feeding strike can be uncomfortable for you and your baby.
To prevent engorgement and maintain your milk supply pump milk as often as your baby used to breast feed.
I think what the doctor said was true.
If the bottle ring is too loose the milk will leak out.
Don t feel guilty though it s not your fault.
As much as possible avoid giving your baby pacifiers or bottles during the strike.
This lasted me for 2 weeks and back to normal.
My 5 month old baby is breastfed and takes a bottle with pumped milk but suddenly she s refusing the bottle.
What can i do.
You wonder whether your baby is gaining enough weight and the change of schedule becomes a hassle to your day.
You can feed the expressed milk to your baby with a spoon dropper or bottle.
Sucking is a natural need for babies and you want him to only be able to satisfy that at the breast.
Try to google baby on milk strike or nursing strike there may be some answer for you.
When it comes to ensuring a baby is fed during a nursing strike consider pumping and bottle feeding or cup feeding.