Choosing how to feed your baby has lifelong effects for your baby and for you. What you have seen and learned about infant feeding from your family, friends, and teachers is likely to influence your attitude and perceptions. Breast milk is recommended as the main source of nutrition for most babies during the first several months of life.
- Breastfeeding. Nature designed human milk especially for human babies. It has several advantages over any substitute ever developed. Your milk has just the right balance of nutrients and it has them in a form most easily used by your baby's immature body systems. Because it was made for your human baby, your milk is also the most gentle on your baby's systems. Exclusive breastfeeding is advised until around 6 months of age. After which, continued breastfeeding is encouraged along with complementary foods until at least 2 years of age.
- Bottle-feeding. If you decide not to breastfeed, or are unable to breastfeed, commercial iron-fortified formulas can provide adequate nutrition for your baby. Infant formulas have enough protein, calories, fat, vitamins, and minerals for growth. But formula doesn't have the immune factors that are in breast milk. The immune factors in breast milk can help prevent infections.
Babies who take enough iron-fortified infant formula (over 1 liter a day) usually don't need vitamin and mineral supplements. Fluoride is sometimes needed after 6 months of age if the water supply doesn't have enough fluoride. Talk with your baby's doctor about the need for fluoride supplements. If your baby is breastfed or still too small to drink enough formula, ask your baby's doctor about vitamin D supplements.