Weaning From Bottle To Sippy Cup
These steps for weaning from a bottle to a sippy cup also work if you re trying to wean your toddler off breastfeeding and plan to move straight to a sippy cup instead of a bottle.
Weaning from bottle to sippy cup. Spill proof cups that have spouts designed just for babies sippy cups can help ease the move from the bottle. Whether you re right on time or a bit behind schedule it happens we ll walk you through how to transition from a bottle to a sippy cup and never look back. A lot of families offer water in a sippy cup right away and that can make the transition tougher she says. When you ve effectively.
Either store or throw out all the bottles and transition to a sippy cup in one day or slowly wean the child over a period of days by replacing a bottle feed with a sippy cup feed every day or so until all the feeds are had out of a sippy cup. You can offer pumped breast milk in the cup initially to make it feel a little more familiar to your little one. Go easy on the nighttime bottle. If your child drinks from a sippy cup only put water in the cup.
In fact she recommends it. Sippy cups can cause cavities ear infections and too much weight gain. Sippy cups can be used as a transition between bottles and open cups and they can minimize spills unless your toddler unscrews the top. This gradual approach works for most babies.
Milk and juice in a sippy cup can cause cavities. Weaning baby from the bottle is a big step and most pediatricians advise starting between 12 and 18 months. When you start using a sippy cup use it for all liquids including milk right away and then switch to an open cup such as a 2 handled cup as soon as your child can manage it usually before age 2. When your child does use the cup offer plenty of praise.
For example you might fill in a cup for the bottle at just one feeding a day then add a second cup the following week. Going from a bottle to a cup doesn t mean that you need to stop giving your child breast milk or formula fisher says you can give them both in a sippy cup or cup with a straw. Holding a bottle or sippy cup requires fine motor skills strength coordination and cognitive development. Sippy cups can also make it harder for kids to learn how to drink from an open cup.
Fill the cup with formula and feed it to them instead of their bottle. The idea is to slowly swap out bottles in favor of cups.