• Baby at the End of the First Year
  • Babies Nutrition as they Grow
  • Weight and Height Related to Age
  • Vaccines
  • SimiMama Club
  • Similac Gold 3
  • كوردي/ سيملاك كولد ٣
  • العربية
  • Developmental Milestones And Feeding Skills

    Birth to 6 Months
    • Sucks well on nipple .
    • finishes each feeding within minutes by 4 months
    • Signs of hunger in newborns are increased alertness or activity, mouthing or rooting. Crying is a late indictor of hunger.
    6-9 Months
    • At 6 months, babies are physiologically and developmentally ready for solid foods
    • Sits independently for a short time
    • Drinks from a cup held by an adult
    • Eats soft food from a spoon or adult’s fingers
    • Uses both hands to hold a bottle
    • Prefers parents to feed
    • Plays with spoon
    • Initial refusal of new flavors and textures is not uncommon. It may take 3-10 offerings before an infant accepts a new food
    • Finger-feeding can be introduced
    • By 9 months, picks up small items using thumb and first finger (e.g., oat ring cereal)
    • Some infants have a more sensitive gag reflex and may not tolerate anything but pureed foods at first
    9-12 Months
    • Begins to take an active independent role in feeding
    • Assists with spoon; some become independent
    • Refining pincer grasp
    • Can hold cup and suck or sip contents, but may spill
    • More willing to accept lumpy textures, especially when self-feeding
    • Initial refusal of new flavours and textures is common. It may take up to10 offerings before infant accepts a new food
    • Licks food from lower lip
    12-18 Months
    • Picks up and eats finger foods
    • Grasps spoon with whole hand
    • Holds cup with 2 hands
    • Holds and tips bottle
    • Compared with the first year of life, a decreased or sporadic appetite is common
    • Unfamiliar foods are often rejected the first time
    18-24 Months
    • Chews broad range of food
    • Self-feeding predominates
    • Displays curiosity and desire to be independent
    • Decreased or sporadic appetite is common
    • Food neophobia (fear of the new) increases through early childhood and then declines. Unfamiliar foods are often rejected the first time _ Food likes and dislikes become prominent
    • Tend to go on food jags (refusal of all but 4 or 5 favourite foods over an extended period)
    • In non-controlling, non-coercive conditions, healthy children have the ability to self-regulate the amount of food and energy consumed
    2-3 Years
    • By 2 years, eats most foods without coughing and choking
    • By 2 years, eats with a utensil with little spilling
    • By 30 months, lifts and drinks from a cup and replaces it on the table
    • May be resistant to new foods
    • Food preferences increase with frequency of exposure. It may take 5- 15 exposures to a new food before a child learns to like it
    • It is normal for children to lose interest in mealtimes. When hungry, they will focus on eating. When satisfied, their attention turns elsewhere
    3-6 Years
    • By age 4, looks for adult approval
    • Food preferences increase with frequency of exposure. It may take 5-15 exposures to a new food before a child learns to like it
    • It is normal for children to lose interest in mealtimes. When hungry, they will focus on eating. When satisfied, their attention turns elsewhere

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