Sometimes a parent is told by a healthcare provider that their breastfed baby should be supplemented with formula. Before changing anything, it’s worth understanding the full picture, because breastfed babies are sometimes mistakenly compared to formula-fed growth patterns.
Steps to consider:
- Confirm your baby’s growth is actually a concern. Breastfed babies should be assessed using the WHO growth charts for breastfed infants, and against their own steady pattern — not against formula-fed averages.
- Look at the signs of adequate feeding — wet nappies, stools, alertness, and weight trend over time.
- If supply truly needs support, the latch and feeding frequency are usually the first things to address. Effective, frequent feeding builds supply.
- Rule out medical causes of poor feeding, such as tongue-tie, with a pediatric assessment.
- If supplementation is genuinely needed, it can often be done while protecting and rebuilding your milk supply, rather than replacing breastfeeding.
If you’re unsure, a pediatric consultation can assess your baby’s growth and feeding and help you make the right decision.
