Awakenings from Being Fed Until Asleep (Trained Night Feeder)
How do I know my baby is a trained night feeder?
A trained night feeder is a baby who:
- is over 4 months old and wakes up and cries one or more times
a night to be fed
- can only return to sleep if your hold and feed him or her
- is breast-fed or bottle-fed until asleep at bedtime and for
naps
- has awakened to be fed at night since birth.
When should babies be fed at night?
From birth to the age of 2 months, most babies awaken twice each
night for feedings. Between the ages of 2 and 3 months, most
babies need one feeding in the middle of the night. By 4 months of
age, most bottle-fed babies sleep more than 7 hours without
feeding. Most breast-fed babies can sleep through the night by 5
months of age. Normal children of this age do not need calories
during the night to stay healthy.
Why does my baby wake at night to be fed?
Some common reasons that babies older than 4 months wake up at
night to be fed include:
- Nursing or bottle-feeding the baby until asleep. If the last
memory before sleep is sucking the breast or bottle, the
bottle or breast becomes the baby's security object. The child
does not learn to comfort himself and fall asleep without the
breast or bottle. Therefore, when the child normally wakes up
at night, the child has the habit of not being able to go back
to sleep without feeding. Being brought to the parents' bed
for a feeding makes the problem far worse.
- Leaving a bottle in the bed. Periodically during the night the
child sucks on a bottle. When it becomes empty, the child
awakens fully and cries for a refill. Bottles in bed, unless
they contain only water, also can lead to severe tooth decay.
- Feeding often during the day. Some mothers misinterpret
"demand feedings" to mean that they should feed the baby every
time he cries. This misunderstanding can lead to feeding the
baby every 30 to 60 minutes. The baby becomes used to being
fed small amounts often instead of waiting at least 2 hours
between feedings at birth and at least 4 hours between
feedings at the age of 4 months. A pattern of feeding every
hour or so is called grazing. This problem occurs more often
in breast-fed babies if nursing is used as a pacifier. Bottle
dependency leads to the bad habit of carrying a bottle around
during the day. Also, giving a child a lot of liquid at night
means your child will wake up more often because his diapers
are soaked.
How long will it last?
If you try the following recommendations, your child's behavior
will probably improve in 2 weeks. The older your child is, the
harder it will be to change your child's habits. Children over 1
year old will fight sleep even when they are tired. They will
vigorously protest any change and may cry for hours. However, if
you don't take these steps, your child won't start sleeping
through the night until 3 or 4 years of age, when busy daytime
schedules finally exhaust your child.
How can I help my child?
Try the following suggestions if your child is over 4 months old
and wakes up and cries one or more times at night to be fed.
- Gradually lengthen the time between daytime feedings to 3 or 4
hours. You can't lengthen the time between nighttime feedings
if the time between daytime feedings is short. If a baby is
used to frequent feedings during the day, he will get hungry
during the night. Grazing often happens to mothers who don't
separate holding from nursing. For every time you nurse your
baby, there should be 4 or 5 times that you snuggle your baby
without nursing. Gradually postpone daytime feeding times
until they are more normal for your baby's age. If you
currently feed your baby hourly, increase the time between
feedings to 1 and 1/2 hours. When your baby accepts the new
schedule, go to 2 hours between feedings. When your baby
cries, cuddle him or give him a pacifier. Your goal for a
formula-fed baby is to give him 4 bottles a day by 4 months of
age. Breast-fed babies often need 5 feedings each day until
they are 6 months old, when solid foods are added to their
diet. If your child is over 6 months old, also introduce cup
feedings. Awaken your infant for a last feeding between 9 and
10 PM. This is necessary until at least 8 months of age, if
you want your child to sleep until 6 am.
- At naps and bedtime, place your baby in the crib drowsy but
awake. When your baby starts to act sleepy, place her in the
crib. If your baby is very fussy, rock her until she settles
down or is almost asleep, but stop before she's fully asleep.
If your baby falls asleep at the breast or bottle, it is best
to wake her up. To help your baby not think of feeding at
bedtime, consider feeding her 1 hour before bedtime or before
a nap. Your baby's last waking memory needs to be of the crib
and mattress, not of the breast or bottle. She needs to learn
to put herself to sleep. Your baby needs to develop this skill
so she can put herself to sleep when she wakes up at night.
- If your baby is crying at bedtime or naptime, visit your baby
briefly every 5 to 15 minutes. Visit your baby before he
becomes too upset. You may need to check babies younger than 1
year or more sensitive babies every 5 minutes. Gradually
lengthen the time between your visits. Make your visits brief
and boring but supportive. Don't stay in the room longer than
1 minute. Don't turn on the lights. Act sleepy. Whisper,
"Shhh, everyone's sleeping." Do not remove your child from
the crib. Do not feed, rock, or play with your baby, or bring
him to your bed. This brief contact will not reward your baby
enough for him to want to continue the behavior. Once you put
your child in the crib, do not remove him.
- For crying during the middle of the night, temporarily hold
your baby until asleep. Until your child learns how to put
herself to sleep at naps and bedtime, make the
middle-of-the-night awakenings as easy as possible. If she
doesn't fuss for more than 5 or 10 minutes, respond as you do
at bedtime. Otherwise, take your crying child out of the crib
and hold her until asleep. However, don't turn on the lights
or take her out of the room. Try not to talk to her very much.
Often this goes better if Dad goes in.
After the last feeding of the day at 9 to 10 PM, feed your
baby only once during the night. Provide this nighttime
feeding only if 4 or more hours have passed since the last
feeding. Make this nighttime feeding boring and brief (no
longer than 20 minutes). Stop it before your child falls
asleep, and replace it with holding only.
- Stop giving your baby any bottle in bed. If you feed your
child at bedtime, don't let him hold the bottle. Also feed
your child in a different room than the bedroom. Try to
separate mealtime and bedtime. If your baby needs to suck on
something to help him go to sleep, offer a pacifier or help
him find his thumb.
- Help your child attach to a security object. A security
(transitional) object is something that helps a waking child
go to sleep. It comforts your child and helps your child
separate from you. A cuddly stuffed animal, doll, other soft
toy, or blanket can be a good security object. Sometimes
covering a stuffed animal with one of the mother's T-shirts
helps a child accept it. Include the security object whenever
you cuddle or rock your child during the day. Also include it
in your ritual before bedtime by weaving it into your
storytelling. Tuck it into the crib next to your child.
Eventually, your child will hold and cuddle the stuffed animal
or doll at bedtime in place of you.
- Later, phase out the nighttime feeding. Phase out the
nighttime feeding only after the time between daytime feedings
is more than 3 hours AND your child can put herself to sleep
without feeding or rocking. Then gradually phase out nighttime
feedings over 2 weeks. Gradually reduce the amount you feed
your baby at night. Decrease the amount of formula you give a
bottle-fed baby by 1 ounce every 2 to 3 nights. Nurse a
breast-fed baby on just one side and reduce the time by 2
minutes every 2 to 3 nights. After 1 to 2 weeks, your baby
will no longer crave food at night and should be able to go
back to sleep without holding or rocking.
- Other helpful hints for sleep problems:
- Move the crib to another room.
If the crib is in your bedroom, move it to a separate
room. If this is impossible, cover one of the side rails
with a blanket so your baby can't see you when he wakes
up.
- Avoid long naps during the day.
If your baby has napped for more than 2 hours, wake her
up. If she has the habit of taking 3 naps during the day,
try to change the habit to 2 naps each day.
- Don't change wet diapers during the night.
Change the diaper only if it is soiled or you are treating
a bad diaper rash. If you must change your child's diaper,
use as little light as possible (for example, a
flashlight), do it quickly, and don't provide any
entertainment.
- Leave your child standing in the crib if necessary. If
your child is standing up in the crib at bedtime, try to
get your child to settle down and lie down. If he refuses
or pulls himself back up, leave him that way. He can lie
down without your help. Repeatedly helping your child to
lie down soon becomes a game.
- Keep a sleep diary. Write down the times when your baby is
awake and asleep. Bring this record with you to your office
follow-up visit.
When should I call my child's healthcare provider?
Call during regular hours if:
- Your child is not gaining enough weight.
- You think the crying has a physical cause.
- Your child acts fearful.
- Someone in your family cannot tolerate the crying.
- The steps outlined here do not improve your child's sleeping
habits within 2 weeks.
- You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2005-05-16
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.