thread: Formula advice from the hospital -- anyone follow it?

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    Mar 2009
    Vietnam
    382

    Formula advice from the hospital -- anyone follow it?

    Hi all,
    I brought our precious bundle home on Thursday with an information sheet from the hospital on formula feeding. (I just had to get away from the midwives).
    The sheet says you have to use water that's boiled within the last half hour. It says each bottle has to be made up fresh, no storing bottles in the fridge, no storing formula and each bottle has to be freshly sterilised.
    We've been trying to stick to this but getting the water to cool while the baby is crying is a pain. Is this advice a bit over the top? I really don't want the baby to get sick but I don't want her crying for 10 minutes before each feed while I swill a bottle around in cold water.

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    melb
    8,498

    You can make formula up and store in fridge for 24 hrs.

    As long as water is boiled and cooled and kept in fridge if you want to make each bottle up as you go.

    OR

    You can steralise all bottles and make a days worth up at once and store in fridge.

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    OK, I used to do that with the water - boil it and then wait till it cooled with a screaming hungry baby in my arms, but then I smartened up and would have some cooled boiled water in a bottle already and then only add enough boiling water to make it the right temp - usually about half and half. The thing with sterilising is that something is only sterile whilever it is in the sterlisising solution - as soon as you take it out it isn't sterile anymore as it's been exposed to the air kwim? I would sterlise in miltons and then take them out as needed, but by the time I got to baby #4 I wasn't even doing that - just washing in hot soapy water and putting them away after they had air dried and we'd never had a problem.

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Feb 2008
    Near the Snowies!
    2,975

    It took me a little while to work out my system, but now here is what I do:

    I use an electric steriliser, so wash bottles at night after she has gone to bed and sterilise them. Then I'll take them out once it switches off and part fill the bottles with boiling water (she gets 180ml bottles so I put 100ml in). Put the lids on the bottles and then pop in the fridge. When it comes to feed time I add 80ml boiling water to the bottle (the other water is now fridge cold) and it brings it up to the right temperature, add formula and feed! I used to make up the bottles fresh everytime, but I too found it awful waiting for the bottle to cool down while I had a screaming hungry baby in my arms! It's also handy with night feeds, don't have to stand around wasting precious sleep time waiting for a bottle to cool!

    i did try filling the bottles with 180ml of boiling water and leaving them on the bench until ready for a feed, but found she didn't like it quite that cool (over winter our house gets quite cold especially overnight).

    That's what worked best for me, as i said it did take a little while to find the right way for me to do it, but once you nut it out and figure out what works best for you, you'll be fine! I think as long as the sterilised bottles are used within 24 hours it'll be fine. If DD only has 5 bottles in one 24 hour period, even though i still have one left over (my steriliser does 6 bottles at a time), I'll still empty it out, re-wash and re-sterilise.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Victoria
    7,260

    I would follow the advice - based on the fact that you are in Vietnam and they may bne considering the water conditions in Vietnam when they write the things for formula use.

    Can you contact a local nurse you can ask about the relevance of these guidelines to your own circumstances?


  6. #6
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber
    Add Schmickers on Facebook

    Jan 2006
    Port Macquarie, NSW
    1,443

    How hygeinic is the place you are living in? As long as you have access to some form of steriliser for your bottles, a refridgerator, safe drinking water, and a way to boil it, you should be fine. Sterilise your bottles - enough for 24 hours if you have them. Boil the kettle. Wash your hands thoroughly. Take your bottles straight out of the steriliser, fill them up with the boiled water (to the right amount to make up each bottle), and seal them. Let them cool, then store them in the fridge for up to 24 hours.

    We store cool boiled water in our formula fridge for 24 hours before changing it and resterilising the container. If it's good enough for a children's nurse, I reckon it is good enough for anyone else.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    YIKES! I didn't realise you weren't in Australia. I would be following their advice too then hun.

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    1,794

    Hun, noticed that you are in Vietnam at moment, so not sure if maybe the water isn't as safe But it does sound extreme to me. I would've thought that once the water was boiled, then the safest place to store it is in the fridge..

    Personally I don't premake bottles, just premeasured water in bottles. Then when I need the bottle, I just add the formula, shake and warm accordingly.