Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Government advice, not widely highlighted by midwives or health visitors in my experience, is for all children under 5 to take daily multivitamins. I've tried offering Abidec and the 'great tasting' Wellkid Baby and Infant, but both are very firmly rejected by my 20-month old. Any tips?

Is the advice not simply because of the nationwide problem of people not cooking healthy meals and lacking basic nutritional knowledge? If your little one is eating well I'm a firm believer that a vitamin supplement isn't necessary. If they get what they need from food you are literally flushing money down the toilet :)


I had HVs tell me (with both #1 and #2) that I should give my babies supplements "because you are breastfeeding and it doesn't have the same vitamins as formula". Grrr.

That's outrageous! And sooo annoying. When health providers give wrong/bad advice, it always makes me feel that it then undermines their good advice b/c I'm inclined to be a skeptic about everything. I had a nurse tell me that I should stop b/fing when my daughter's teeth erupted, b/c she (wrongly) thought breastmilk causes dental caries.


I think supplements are a bit of a waste if your diet is good, but at the same time, if it puts your mind at ease, then I can understand why people use them, eg vitamin D deficiency is a big concern for many people at high latitudes. Plus, some children seem to be more fussy about food anyway. I give my daughter Bassetts occasionally, but I don't worry about it if she doesn't have one for a while either.


I think the BLW weaning book has info on dietary sources of vitamins/minerals in the back pages. I also found Alex Richardson's book "They Are What You Feed Them" to be really easy to read and not patronising of parents. It has advice and information on a wide-variety of food and supplement-related issues with diet.

I always diluted abidec with water as a juice for my daughter and she always accepted with breakfast. She has had vitamins since birth. She is now taking bassetts soft and chewy from about 30months old, 6 months before recommended. I always gave her vitamins as I breastfed for 2 years throughout ongoing health issues with myself. She never dropped feeds ever between this time. Until she self weaned at 2 she was still feeding as if she was a newborn although a lot of it would of been for comfort more than milk. Whilst I was breast feeding I was found to be extremely vitamin d deficient (my consultant had never seen such low levels of vitamin d in a woman of my age - I had almost none in my system) I had to start immediate high dosage of vitamin d to boost my supply. This made me very weary of her lacking in vitamin d too, since then I have always made sure she took a multivitamin supplement.
Pickle, your HV was just repeating government advice. Although it may seem dispiriting it's true that we can be absolutely sure how much vit D is in formula and we can't with breast milk. That doesn't mean anyone is saying breast milk isn't as good and I certainly don't want to get into that debate! But advice has to be formulated on a population basis so if many women don't have enough vit D then their breast milk won't contain alot, so supplements are reasonable advice.
Thanks for all these helpful posts. I breastfed my daughter till 15 months and absolutely believe it was the best thing for her, but took supplements myself during that time. I heard a news item about a baby of 4 months dying from Rickets in the UK, presumably because the mother's level of vitamin D during pregnancy was very low, which has reminded me about the issue. In January this year the Chief Medical Officer sent out advice that all pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, and children aged 6 months to 5 years take vitamin D, as evidence suggested 1 in 4 people are deficient. See http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9035173/Vitamin-D-deficiency-in-UK-a-major-problem.html, or for the letter itself, http://www.dh.gov.uk/prod_consum_dh/groups/dh_digitalassets/@dh/@en/documents/digitalasset/dh_132508.pdf. There are signs of a resurgence of Rickets in the UK, at the extreme end, and other bone development problems in milder cases. From what I understand, it was eradicated at one time by giving all children Cod Liver oil, and by supplementing common foods, but now we longer give Cod Liver oil, and are rigorous about covering children up and using sunscreen in sunny weather, the problem is resurfacing. The organic foods I've been buying (good for other reasons) don't seem to be supplemented as old-fashioned sugar and salt laden baby foods once were, perhaps!

edanna Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Pickle, your HV was just repeating government

> advice. Although it may seem dispiriting it's true

> that we can be absolutely sure how much vit D is

> in formula and we can't with breast milk. That

> doesn't mean anyone is saying breast milk isn't as

> good and I certainly don't want to get into that

> debate! But advice has to be formulated on a

> population basis so if many women don't have

> enough vit D then their breast milk won't contain

> alot, so supplements are reasonable advice.


OK, but, surely the advice should be to supplement the mother, as Vit D complexes in breastmilk would be more readily absorbed than extraneously delivered Vit D to the infant???


Also, I still think Pickle's HV was wrong to compare b/fing to formula. If supplementation is needed, it is not b/c there is a comparison to be draw to formula. Actually, breastmilk from a healthy mother is the standard to which all other infant feeding formulas should be compared. If supplements or dietary changes are thought beneficial, it should be as a way to maximise the benefit derived from a healthy, normal breastfeeding dyad, not as a comparison to formulated milks.

OSW your point about Vit D and the recent use of sunscreens, covering up etc is very salient in my mind. We're very fair-skinned and are always very sun cautious.


An adult friend of mine was recently told that b/c she needs to use so much sun protection during the summer for fair skin, there is little chance that she has ability to store enough Vit D to last through the winter. Her Vit D is so chronically low that her GP and her dietitian have recommended supplements, as they felt it would be difficult to assure her vit D was high enough through diet.


Sunbob, interested in the Vit drops you got from HV! I will ask our HV too at our 2yr check this week.


I try not to obsess about nutrition, but I guess there are a few times when our bodies can use some help. xx

My daughter has been taking Sainsburys chewable multivitamins and omega3. She loves them! We started them when she was around 2.5 years although they say from 3. She is a very fussy eater so I feel they can only do her good. It's very difficult to get her to take medicine so the abcd ones were out even hidden she could tell- they do stink! I also have a 6 month old and I keep diverting to give his healthy start drops. I'm still breastfeeding him though and I take supplements myself.

we use the wellbaby vitamins which our 2 year old loves. She is veggie and also quite fussy so these are a precaution for her. You can't get the drops (which I used to put into her milk) from the HV at 2 years old so you have to buy. I wasn't sure about the chewy sweets (too many dentists in the family!) so went for liquid which we give at breakfast so her teeth will be cleaned soon after.


TBH I think this is good advice, we can offer the most balanced diet in the world but can't force our children to eat it, so at least this ensures they are getting important nutrients.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Nothing to do with the tories overspending whatsoever eh! Blame the last 10/11 years of blatant mismanagement, incompetence and willful deceit on the poor bastards that were left with the fall out of a complete car crash tory government.   One PM after another falling on their sword. Open corruption and piss taking throughout covid and a legacy of huge debt and destruction yet in your view it will be labour's 4 years in power that bankrupts us in 2029.  Another one that must think people are blind and stupid.  Rejoice rejoice. It's a pity he and his fellow clowns were completely annihilated at the ballot box. I mean they were doing so well after all 🙃🙃
    • Where did I say he did a good job? Yup and Corbyn was very close to Len McCluskey and funded by Unite wasn't he...they're all as bad as each other... Labour have to purge their party of the far-left - they're a disaster. Allan Johnson summed it up so well on election night in 2019....  
    • Thank you for the detailed advise @trinidad It is definitely damage we are concerned about. I don’t think Evri would agree to pay the bill to fix our gate or letter box if they were to be damaged as a result of their delivery drivers helper. Our doorbell can be heard from outside when rung so we don’t quite believe the aggressive simultaneous door/letter box banging is necessary. It can be quite a shock it is done very aggressively.  I’ll definitely action the steps you’ve kindly provided along with a phone call tomorrow. I do sympathise with the role drivers have and how busy they are, which is why we tried communicating directly with her but sadly we haven’t succeeded 
    • What outcome would you like? Disciplinary action? Not to have the driver back? Retraining? I know there is alot of pressure on drivers to deliver within a set day. if he slams the gate, is it evidence he is causing damage, or is the noise a irritant to yourself? You could put a sign up or buy a signing asking to close the gate gentle???? can you hear the door bell from the door? he might be ringing, not hearing and therefore knocking. In trhe notes section of the be livery page, there is a note section, although there is not 100 per cent these notes would be read as these drivers are constantly rushing.  I did a google search for you, i found this and you can try the envri website Contact Us | Evri   To complain to Evri, you can follow these steps: Contact Customer Service: Call Evri's customer service at 0330 808 5456 for assistance with your complaint.    1 Write a Letter: Address your complaint to Capitol House, 1 Capitol Close, Morley, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS27 0WH.    1 Use the Official Website: Visit the Evri complaints page on their official website for detailed instructions on how to submit a complaint.    2 Email or Call for Specific Issues: For issues like missing or damaged parcels, you can email or call 0800 988 8888, which is free to call.    1 These methods will help you effectively communicate your concerns to Evri.   My driver is called anthony, he is brilliant to be honest. I cant fault him.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...