Sleep Problems And Nighttime Feedings
Although your baby may give up regular nighttime feedings on his
own by the time he’s three months old, do not expect – or insist – that such a
young infant give them up altogether, all of a sudden.
But if your child is at least three months old, still nurses or
requires a bottle at bedtime, and needs to eat again several more times during
the night, then the extra feedings may well be causing the extra wakings. If
that is the case, you may be able to help him sleep better by decreasing the
number of these feedings.
However, if your baby takes in a substantial amount of food – from
extended feedings at the breast, or bottles adding up to more than eight ounces
over the course of the night – then he has learned that certain times of night
are mealtimes. To eliminate these feedings suddenly wouldn’t be wise or nice.
The amount of milk or juice your child drinks during the night may
be considerable. If he finishes four full eight-ounce bottles, that is a large
amount for even an adult to consume overnight.
Solving The Problem
If you have concluded that excessive and unnecessary feedings at
night are disrupting your child’s sleep, you will be relieved to learn that
although such feedings can lead to severe sleep disturbances, the problem is
also one of the easiest to fix.
Two things need to be addressed. The first is to reduce or
eliminate the nighttime feedings to avoid their various sleep-disrupting
effects. The second is to teach your child new sleep associations so that he
can fall asleep without being held, without eating, and without sucking on the
breast or bottle. You can do these things at the same time, or one at a time.
To fix the problems caused by the feedings, start by gradually
decreasing the number of nighttime feedings, their size, or both. Just don’t
stop the feedings suddenly. A program designed to allow new patterns to develop
will be easier for him to follow.
Your goal is to gradually move your child’s feelings of hunger out
of the nighttime and into the daytime. Once there is only a single remaining
nighttime feeding left, you can choose to stop that feeding right away – instead
of gradually – if you prefer, since the total amount of ingested food during
the night is now fairly small.
If you are working on sleep associations and hunger patterns
simultaneously, put your child in bed as soon as each feeding is over, even if
he wakes and begins to cry. If you nurse him and he sleeps next to you, move
him off of you when the feeding is done so that he can learn to fall asleep
without using your breast as a pacifier. You’ve just fed him, so he is not
hungry – now you are only changing his expectation of what happens while he
falls asleep.
Within a week, if all goes well, you will have finished cutting
down or even eliminating the nighttime feedings. After that, continue applying
the technique of progressive waiting at any waking at night (except for feeding
times) until the wakings stop. It should not take more than another few days.
Comments
Post a Comment