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Here you'll find helpful advice and answers to parents' most common questions.

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Feeding Issues

  • Absolutely. By the first month, you will be able to tell which cry means what, for the most part. Ask yourself these questions when the waterworks start:

    • Do they need a diaper change?
    • Do they need to be burped?
    • Are they too warm or too cold?
    • Are they uncomfortable?
    • Do they need attention?
    • Have they hurt themself?
    • Are they hungry?
    • Are they tired or over-stimulated?


    Related: Understanding Why Babies Cry

  • Start by talking to your baby's doctor. If these symptoms are due to cow's milk protein allergy, your doctor may be able to suggest a specialty formula to help relieve colic in your baby.

    Also, try these mom-tested tips for colicky babies:

    • Soothe your baby with motion—like walking, driving in the car, or pushing them in their stroller.
    • Try holding your baby stomach-down across your lap or arm, and rocking them gently.
    • Put on a “white noise” CD or turn on the vacuum cleaner to create a steady sound that could be soothing to your baby.
    • Try cuddling, or giving your baby a pacifier or swaddling them.
    • Be patient. Most babies outgrow colic at around three months.
  • Fussiness and/or excess gas can be caused by something you ate if you're nursing, due to your baby's underdeveloped digestive system or by a sensitivity to lactose in your baby's formula. Try these tips to help avoid baby fussiness and gas.

    If you're breastfeeding, lay off the spicy or gassy foods like cabbage, garlic, onions, broccoli and caffeine.

    If you're formula-feeding, ask your doctor about formulas with partially broken-down proteins and reduced lactose that can help with fussiness or relieve gassy baby.

     

    Related: What is Colic: A Parent’s Guide to Calming Babies

  • Excessive crying, especially in the evenings, could mean colic. Colic can be brought on by a food intolerance. If you're nursing, try eliminating spicy or gassy foods such as onions, cabbage and other foods that seem to be upsetting your baby. If you're formula-feeding, you may need to switch to a formula created for babies with food intolerance.

     

    Related: What is Colic: A Parent’s Guide to Calming Babies

  • Multiple food protein allergies are a reaction by the body's immune system to the protein in two or more foods. When the food is eaten, a chain of chemical reactions occur within the body, causing an allergic reaction. Some allergic reactions occur within 30 minutes of eating the food, but can occur as much as 4-6 hours or days later. 

    In young children, the foods most likely to cause allergies are cow's milk, eggs, wheat, peanuts, soy, tree nuts, fish and shellfish.

    Related: Cow's Milk Allergy

  • Adding rice cereal to infant formula increases the calorie content and changes the balance between protein, fat, and carbohydrates. Enfamil A.R. infant formula is nutritionally balanced and more convenient than mixing baby rice cereal with infant formula. And, Enfamil A.R. is clinically proven to reduce frequent spit up. It has added rice starch which allows the formula to become thicker in the stomach.

    Related: Why Do Babies Spit Up

  • Aside from addressing their basic needs, you can bring comfort simply by being you. Cuddling, rocking, stroking, talking and walking around with your baby are all time-tested methods.

    Related: Why Babies Cry at Night

  • If your baby seems to be spitting up excessively, ask their doctor about formulas with added rice starch, which are designed to help reduce spit-up in babies.

    Also, try these simple hints to help reduce spit-up in babies:

    • Make each feeding as relaxed as possible for them.
    • If your baby is crying and frantic with hunger, calm them before the feeding. That might prevent them from gulping air.
    • Keep your baby in an upright position while you feed them.
    • Make sure the hole in the bottle's nipple is the right size. When you turn the bottle upside down, a few drops of formula should come out. Then the dripping should stop.
    • Feed them smaller amounts.
    • Burp your baby after every 2-3 fluid ounces.
    • Avoid bouncing and very active play right after eating.

    Related: How To Ease Spit-Up for Your Baby

  • The average 8-week-old cries for about two hours a day. You may notice this around the end of the day, when they're tired from all the stimulation. A fussy baby may cry more often.

    Related: Why Babies Cry at Night

  • Soy protein allergy is similar to cow’s milk allergy, but it is the soy protein that causes an immune system reaction.

    Related: Hydrolyzed Formula Benefits for Baby

  • When a germ like a cold virus enters your baby's body, their immune system releases chemicals like histamines to fight it off.

    1. This is good because it keeps your baby healthy. Sometimes though, immune systems get a little overprotective and cause the body to attack things that aren't really bad for it, such as casein and whey, proteins found in cow's milk.
    2. Once your little one's immune system identifies cow's milk protein as a health threat, it will want to battle this protein every time they consume a milk-based product like routine infant formula. This results in persistent allergic reactions like colic, hives, rashes, and respiratory and digestive problems. While it might be upsetting to hear that your baby can't have dairy products, there is a very good chance that this won't always be the case. More than 75 percent of children outgrow cow's milk allergy by age five.
    3. Still, you should introduce your child to foods made with cow's milk only while under the supervision of a healthcare professional.

    Related: What is CMA?

  • Cow's milk allergy is an immune system response to milk proteins such as casein and whey. Lactose intolerance is a digestive system response to a milk sugar called lactose. Infants who are lactose intolerant lack an enzyme needed to digest this milk sugar.

    Cow's milk allergy and lactose intolerance share a few symptoms, such as gas, abdominal pain and diarrhea. But unlike cow's milk allergy, lactose intolerance doesn't engage the immune system and cause allergic reactions such as hives, skin rashes, breathing problems, or chronic runny noses and coughs. Another key difference is the age that children develop these problems. Cow's milk allergy is more common in infancy. Lactose intolerance is much more likely to affect children age three years and older. Even then, it is very rare.

     

    Related: Indicators of Lactose Intolerance in Babies

  • A food intolerance does not involve the immune system. Lactose intolerance is the most common type of food intolerance. Symptoms can include gas, bloating, stomach pain, or diarrhea. However, lactose intolerance is rare in babies and young children.

     

    Related: Lactose Intolerance in Babies

  • Although it is not known why any particular baby will be allergic to cow’s milk protein, there are at least two things that make it possible:

    1. Your baby’s immune system is still very immature, meaning it is less able to distinguish harmful foreign substances from harmless protein.
    2. The whole proteins in cow’s milk are made up of long strings of amino acids, which are able to stimulate an allergic response.

    If the protein causes an immune system response, it causes an allergic reaction. What’s worse, if the issue goes unmanaged, your baby may not gain weight and grow like they should.

    Related: What is CMA?

  • Although the incidence of cow’s milk protein allergy is very low in breastfed infants compared to formula-fed infants, it does happen. It is not an allergy to breast milk itself. Instead, the allergy usually begins after proteins, including cow’s milk protein, are passed from mom to her baby through breast milk.

    If you are breastfeeding and your baby is showing allergic behaviors, elimination of common allergens such as cow’s milk, eggs, fish, peanuts, and tree nuts (e.g., almonds, pecans, and Brazil nuts) from your diet could help. It’s best, though, to check with your doctor or dietitian, to let them guide you on what to eat while breastfeeding.

    If this doesn’t help, check with your baby’s doctor.

    Related: Managing Cow's Milk Protein Allergy

  • Most children outgrow cow's milk protein allergy by the age of 3. However, this is not always the case. Doing something about the allergy as early as possible helps. Here are some other things you can do to lower the likelihood of food allergies for your baby:

    • No solid foods until at least 4-6 months of age
    • Breastfeed your baby until at least 1 year of age, if possible
    • Introduce new foods in small portions and one at a time. Watch for a reaction (several days) before introducing the next food
    • Talk to your baby's doctor about introducing foods that commonly cause allergies such as peanuts, egg whites, or fish

    Related:  How To Manage Cow’s Milk Protein Allergy

  • Enfamil® gives you lots of great feeding options for when you're on the go with your baby: 

    • Enfamil ready to use bottles, known as Nursette®bottles. Just attach a clean, standard-size nipple to a Nursette bottle and you're ready to feed.
    • Enfamil Single-Serve Powder Packets. The powdered formula is pre-measured, making it especially easy to mix.
    • Enfamil powder. Simply prefill your bottles with water and carry the powder separately. When you're ready to feed your baby, just combine the powder and water, cap the bottle and shake well.

    Enfamil Nursette® bottles, single-serve powder packets, and all Enfamil formulas are available through our convenient Enfamil® Shop as well as many stores.

     

    Related: 5 Tips for Traveling with Baby Formula

  • Mix our concentrated liquid or powder formula with cool water (35-75° F); it should feel cool on your wrist. If you prefer, you may mix with warm water but only if you plan to feed or refrigerate the formula immediately. Warm water is about 100° F or body temperature; it should feel neutral (neither warm nor cool) on your wrist.

At TEST Enfamil, we are dedicated to giving the millions of babies and toddlers that rely on our formulas the best start in life.

The majority of the Enfamil products tested by Consumer Reports* were ranked as “Top Choices,” which accurately reflects our commitment to providing the highest quality and safety in infant formula that parents and pediatricians have trusted for 120 years.

We value the trust parents and caregivers put in our formulas and that’s why Mead Johnson Nutrition ensures our products not only meet, but exceed requirements set by the U.S. FDA and other international regulatory bodies. Our stringent quality and safety protocols start with testing ingredients and only end when our infant formulas leave our hands.

All Mead Johnson Nutrition products tested are fully compliant with safety and quality regulations, including formulas rated lower like Nutramigen or Puramino. We regularly test these products and hundreds of tests contradict the findings of this singular report. We encourage parents and caregivers to speak to their pediatrician, if they have any questions.

Should you need assistance in finding the formula you need, please reach out to our Customer Service team 1-800 BABY-123 (222-9123).

*Reported March 2025