Six-month infant feeding schedule and enlightenment the day after tomorrow can greatly improve children's intelligence. If there is a problem, it shows that there is still room for improvement in children's growth, and the influence of companionship and education will accompany them all their lives. Let's share with you the six-month baby feeding schedule.
Six-month infant feeding schedule 1 main food: breast milk or formula milk.
Auxiliary food: boiled water, cod liver oil (the ratio of vitamin A to vitamin D is 3: 1), fruit juice, vegetable juice, vegetable soup, broth, rice flour (paste), egg yolk paste, vegetable paste, fruit paste, fish paste, meat paste and animal blood.
Meal: once every 4 hours.
At 6: 00 in the morning, breast-feed for 20 minutes, or formula milk150-200ml; Feed 80 ml of fruit juice or vegetable juice or warm water at 8:00; 10:00: 20 grams of rice flour and 1/4 egg yolk were fed; 12:00 feed vegetable juice or fruit juice or vegetable soup 30-60ml, fish sauce or meat sauce 20-50g.
Afternoon: 14:00, breast milk for 20 minutes, or formula milk150-200ml; 16:00, feed 30-60g of vegetable puree or fruit puree and 30-60ml; of broth; 18:00, breast-feed for 20 minutes, or formula milk 150-200ml, rice soup 30-60ml.
At night: 20:00, 50 grams of fruit puree or green leafy vegetable puree and egg yolk1/4 are fed; Breastfeeding for 20 minutes at 22:00, or formula milk 150-200ml.
Remarks: cod liver oil 1 time a day, 400μ each time.
Feeding schedule for 6-month-old infants: It is not advisable to feed egg whites to infants within 2 6 months.
The gastrointestinal mucosal barrier of infants within 6 months is not fully developed, but protein molecules in egg white are small, which can easily enter the blood through intestinal mucosa, causing allergic reactions, such as eczema and urticaria on the skin.
Don't add complementary food to your child before going to bed. Before going to bed (around ten o'clock), give your child enough milk.
The correct way to add complementary food should be that the first suggestion is to add it in the morning. The doctor said that even if you feel uncomfortable after eating it, you can see a doctor in the afternoon. It is enough to add complementary food every morning for 6 months. After 6 months, you can add another meal of rice flour or porridge around 6 pm (that is, after 6 pm, usually at dinner time). 10 o'clock is still a big bottle of milk, so that the baby is full and can sleep well at night. Rice flour is a staple food, and it is also fed once every 3 to 4 hours.
With the improvement of children's gastrointestinal function, while adding rice flour, you can also add animal blood such as chickens, ducks and pigs, lean meat paste, fish paste, pig liver paste, chicken liver paste and other foods rich in iron and easy to absorb, and you can directly add rice flour. Be careful not to add any seasoning within 1 year.
Key points of complementary food addition: from single to diverse, from less to more, from thin to thick, from soft to slightly hard. If gastrointestinal intolerance occurs in the process of adding complementary food, feeding should be stopped and gradually added after gastrointestinal function returns to normal.
The correct order of adding complementary food to the six-month-old infant feeding schedule 3 is:
You can't add vegetarian food until you are 4 months old.
You can't add meat (meat) until you are 6 months old.
Seafood can only be added when it is 9 months old.
Here I give you a timetable for your reference:
The first breakfast milk (milk powder) is around 6 o'clock in the morning.
The second breakfast is complementary food (porridge or rotten noodles) around 8 am.
The third lunch is about 12 pm milk (powdered milk)
The fourth lunch is milk (powdered milk) at 2 or 3 pm.
The fifth dinner is a complementary food (porridge or rotten noodles) around 6 pm.
The sixth supper milk powder is around 10 in the afternoon.
At the age of 1, the third meal will be changed to food.
In addition to giving children porridge or boiled noodles twice a day, complementary food can also add some bean products and still eat vegetable paste, fish and liver. During teething, children should continue to eat biscuits and baked steamed bread slices and practice chewing.