Despite some clear messages from many health organizations, old recommendations -- or old wives' tales -- have many babies starting on solids before they reach 6 months old. Reasons range from "Baby is big enough!" to "Baby is too small!" (huh?) and even "I can just tell she's ready."
Even when it seems like baby is interested in food before then, often they're just interested in mimicking you, and would copy you putting something in your mouth the same way they'd copy putting your hairbrush on your head -- just copying, not intestinal lining cellular changes, the thing we're really waiting for.
There are very good reasons to delay solids until at least 6 months ...
1. It's recommended by the World Health Organization, UNICEF, The American Academy of Family Physicians, National Health & Medical Research Council, and many prominent pediatricians. The lower range numbers, and many of the reasons along with it, have been outdated for quite awhile.
2. Waiting until the cells lining the baby's gut have closed helps prevent many allergies, gas, rashes, and medical issues.
3. Waiting also shows less incidences of gastroenteritis, diabetes, and obesity (as much as six-fold!) and even ear infections.
4. Breastfeeding for at least seven months actually shows decreased rates of anemia.
5. Baby is much less likely to choke -- even on purees -- when baby is older, and can also sit upright of their own accord (babies should never be fed foods leaning back).
6. Baby's gut doesn't produce enzymes to aid in digestion until 3-4 months, and the ones that break down more complicated fats, starches, and carbohydrates won't be produced until 6-9 months, meaning lots of gas, constipation, vomiting, and wasted nutrients before then. Even generally fussiness months later is noted in babies who were started too early.
7. While some babies may be ready between 4-6 months (no evidence has ever shown anything but risks earlier), it's impossible to tell without looking with a microscope in the gut, so waiting until 6 months minimum is a safer move for all babies.
8. Waiting until your baby can pick up and put food into their own mouth while sitting up straight is a clear sign of readiness, especially if they can gum and swallow the foods. The Department of Health's Infant Feeding recommendation actually suggests allowing babies who show readiness before 6 months to play with finger foods (that's right, no purees), as it's also unlikely they will swallow before they're biologically ready.
9. The tongue thrust reflex is to help prevent choking, but spoons of liquid purees can often get past it, since the reflex point is farther forward than an adult's gagging reflex. Putting food in the front of the mouth and allowing baby to move it back, which they can't do until often after 6 months, helps prevent choking and is also, of course, a sign of readiness.
10. Most parent assumptions about when babies are ready are related to other biological norms -- waking up at night, reaching for food, mimicking your eating, wanting to eat more -- and are confused for signs of readiness. Having a set date AND a list of readiness signs helps prevent early introduction based on confusion about normal behaviors.
My friend at the Analytical Armadillo has a much longer and science-heavy post that I adore, but after all is said and done, it pretty much comes down to this: There are no benefits, only risks, to starting a baby before they're biologically ready, and since we can't see the gut, we have to go by outside cues, and waiting until a bare minimum of 6 months is the safest way to play it. If a couple weeks is the difference between a gut infection and not, the choice is pretty clear.
What reasons were most compelling for you to delay solids until 6 months (or more)?
Image via babbagecabbage/Flickr


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Comments 68
I waited until my EBF son was six months old before introducing solids. It's exciting for your baby to start solids, but having the information that it was best to wait, I did that because that was best for my child, which is more important than my excitement for him reaching a new milestone. My mother and other moms I know urged me to introduce solids earlier because my son is a big boy, but he was not starving. The size of a baby does not make them physically ready. I think moms don't like to admit that they made any kind of mistake, ever! So they say these pediatricians and health organizations can't be right because they went against their advice and their child is fine. It's about the risks which are not set in stone, but you wouldn't say it was a good idea to smoke while pregnant because there are only risks involved. We have the information to help us make better choices about our children's health so I like to consider that information that is backed up by numerous studies, instead of listening to advice from my cousin's sister in law's mom.
My mom started us on purees and cereals at 6 weeks. I am overweight now, because I eat junk and I don't exercise - not because my mom fed me early.
We started our two boys on rice cereal the day they turned 3 months old. Neither one of them "got it" at first, they had to figure out how to move the food to the back of their mouths, but they figured it out. We started purees at 3 1/2 months old. Both my boys are healthy, have no digestive problems, and no food allergies or aversions. They are skinny because they are active and because they eat healthy foods. If I fed them nothing but McDonalds and they sat around watching TV all day, they would be overweight.
If you have digestive problems as an adult, it is not because your parents fed you early - if that were the case, you would have had digestive problems that directly correlated to the foods they were giving you at that time. You don't all of a sudden develop digestive problems because your mom gave you peas at 3 months old.
I totally advocate learning the facts and listening to your doctor's advice, but at the end of the day it's your decision as a parent to do what you believe is right for your kids.
we tried to hold out until 6 months but at 5 months we finally gave in. i wish we had started sooner he really needed solids at 4 months and i believe because we held out he become animeic and had to start iron suppliments. its baby lead. you can tell when your baby needs more then milk next time i will follow my instincs rather then orders
..and my son started solids at 4 months with no problems but I'm not going to sit here and argue with statistics that show that on average babies aren't ready until 6 months and starting before then leads to an increased risk of complications. It's the truth, not something someone is saying to make me feel bad.
For those of you getting all hot and bothered about this post-Instead of being defensive about decisions you made.. be grateful you now have better information and others do as well. Just because you and or your kid made it through okay doesn't mean it is a good idea for most kids.. I have a friend who put cereal in their daughter's bottle (at less than 3 months) to get her to sleep thru the night.. within the month she was having intensive doctor visits and it took years for her to get past her health issues- gastro stuff gee I wonder what caused it...