How to Choose Baby Bottles?

How to Choose Baby Bottles?

If you’re looking to feed your infant, odds are you’re overwhelmed with baby bottles choices. Many different types of types, shapes, and sizes. What is the best way to decide?

There’s not a gold expert-approved common baby bottle. It ultimately is all about which one will best suit your infant (and your own!). But, you’ll need to begin with a place. So, settle down and take a look around, and here are the infant bottle fundamentals.

Related: Early Dental Visits of Your Child – Why and How

First Tip for Choosing Baby Bottles

Although we would recommend that you get a hold of specific items before the time your baby is born, however, the bottle isn’t one of the items. It’s because while some baby bottles are advertised as magical food unicorns the most important factor is which one gets the approval of your child. Therefore, you should start with just a handful (maybe even two types). This way, you won’t be stuck with a large number of Baby bottles that could receive the thumbs-down from your small one. check out the Best Baby Bottles for Gas and Colic Prevention as a new mom.

Let’s go over those basic bottle concepts.

Bottle Material

Bottles can be made from glass, silicone, plastic, or stainless steel.

Plastic Pros that plastic bottles have are that they’re lightweight and won’t break when dropped. The downside is that they become damaged over time and require to be replaced regularly (signs of deterioration could be cracks, scratches and leaks, discoloration, and an unpleasant odor). 

If you choose to go with the plastic bottle route, make certain that they’re brand fresh. Plastic baby bottles that are older may be contaminated with BPA (or bisphenol A which is a dangerous substance that’s no longer allowed for use in products designed specifically for babies).

While plastic baby bottles are generally considered to be safe It’s important to note that there is a concern that the American Academy of Pediatrics recently issued an opinion regarding food additives which raises questions regarding mixing plastic with food (including baby formula as well as human milk pumped).

Silicone

Baby Bottles made of food-grade silicone are BPA-free and light and flexible. They will not fall apart, but they’re likely to bounce!

Glass bottles are BPA-free and long-lasting, however, they are heavy and brittle. Certain glass bottles have silicone sleeves to guard against breaking.

Stainless Steel

Stainless steel bottles are free of BPA, extremely light, and tough. But, you’ll be paying for it, in a literal sense. they’re expensive on the market. One thing to keep on your mind is, unlike other bottles you don’t get to discern the amount of liquid inside them from the outside.

Disposable Plastic Liners

These are useful, but they’re expensive and can only be used for a single time. When you’re ready to use them, fill them up, put them into a bottle that is specifically designed for them and then toss them after the feeding.

Bottle Shapes

In all, the bottles are available in these forms:

Standard Standard Tall as well as straight as well as easy to clean and fill.

Angled Bent around the neck so milk can collect in the bottom. This can keep your child in swallowing air. However, they could be more difficult to clean and fill.

Wide

Designed to hold short, wide nipples that resemble breasts.

Bottle Size

Bottles typically come in small (around 4 pounds) as well as big (around 8oz) sizes. Small bottles are ideal for the first few days of life in which babies drink around 2-3 ounces of fluid per feeding. However, they grow out of their small bottles fast and you can cut costs by not using the bottles and getting larger ones at the start should you choose.

Nipple Materials

In general bottles nipples are constructed of silicone or latex. Latex is more soft and flexible, however, it wears out quicker and some babies react to it. Silicone is more firm than latex however it is also more robust. Be sure to keep in mind your bottle nipples, and replace them if they exhibit indications of wear, such as thinning, becoming hard, discolored, or tear. Another indicator that it’s time for an upgrade is when the milk begins flowing faster than before.

Nipple Shapes

The majority of nipples patterns can be classified into three groups:

  • LONGER and Narrower (traditional)
  • Longer and wide (designed to mimic breasts)
  • It is flat to one end (designed to mimic sucking the breast of a human and/or make it a better fit for a the mouth of a baby)