Well Child Care at 6 Months

 

Feeding

If you haven’t started your baby on baby foods (other than cereal), you can start now. Begin with fruits and vegetables. Start one new food at a time for a few days to make sure your baby digests it well. Do not start meats until your baby is 7 to 8 months old. So not give foods that require chewing. Don’t start eggs until age 12 months. At meals give the baby formula, or breast-feed your baby before giving baby food.
Your baby should continue having breast milk or infant formula until he is 1 year old. Your baby may soon be ready for a cup although it will be messy at first. Try giving a cup occasionally to see if you baby likes it. Don’t put your baby to bed with a bottle. Your baby will start to see the bottle as a security object and this will make it difficult to wean your child form the bottle. Prolonged bottle use, especially at night will lead to tooth decay and may cause ear infections.
Make cereal with formula or breast milk only. Use a spoon to feed your baby cereal, not a bottle or an infant feeder. Sitting up while eating helps your baby learn good eating habits.

Development

At this age babies are usually rolling over and beginning to sit by themselves. Babies squeal, babble, laugh, and often cry very loudly. They may be afraid of people they do not know. Meet your baby’s needs quickly and be patient with your baby. If you feel overwhelmed, ask people you trust for help, or talk with your health care provider.

Sleep

6-month-olds may not want to be put on bed. A favorite blanket or stuffed animal may make bedtime easier. Do not put a bottle in the bed with your baby. Develop a bedtime routine like playing a game, singing a lullaby, turning the lights out, and giving a goodnight kiss. Make the same every night. Be calm and consistent with your baby at bedtime.  If your baby is not sleeping through the night, ask your doctor for further information about preventing sleep problems. And remember, do not out a bottle in the bed with your baby.

Safety Tips

Avoid Choking and Suffocation

  • Cords, ropes, or strings around the baby’s neck can choke him. Keep cords away from the crib.
  • Keep al small, hard objects out of reach.
  • Use only unbreakable toys without sharp edges or small parts that can come loose.
  • Avoid foods on which a child might choke (such as candy, hot dogs, peanuts, popcorn).

Prevent Fires and Burns

  • Develop and practice a fire escape plan.
  • Check you smoke detector to make sure it is working.
  • Keep a fire extinguisher in or near the kitchen.
  • Check food temperatures carefully, especially if foods have been heated in a microwave oven,
  • Keep hot foods and liquids or of reach.
  • Put plastic covers in unused electrical outlets.
  • Throw away cracked or frayed old electric cords.
  • Turn your water heater down to 120° F (50° C).

Avoid Falls

  • Keep crib and playpen sides up.
  • Avoid using walkers.
  • Install safety gates to guard stairways.
  • Lock doors to dangerous areas like the basement or garage.
  • Check drawer, tall furniture, and lamps to make sure that can’t fall over easily.

Prevent Poisoning

  • Keep all medicines, vitamins, cleaning fluids, and gardening chemicals locked away or disposed of safely.
  • Install safety latches on cabinets.
  • Keep the poison center number on all phones.

Immunizations

At the 6-month visit, your baby should have a:

  • DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis) shot
  • Hepatitis B shot
  • Polio shot
  • Pneumococcal (PCV7) shot
  • Rotavirus oral vaccine

Some children may also receive a:

  • Hib (Haemophilus influenza type b) shot

Some vaccines come mixed together in the same shot, so your baby will probably not have 5 separate shots.
Your baby may run a fever and be irritable for about 1 day after the shots. Your baby may also have some soreness, redness, and swelling where the shots were given. Acetaminophen drops (1/2 dropperful, or .4 ml, every 4 to 6 hours) may help to prevent fever and irritability. For swelling or soreness put a wet warm washcloth on the area of the shots as often and as long as need for comfort.

Call your child’s health care provider if:

Your child has a rash or any other than reaction besides fever and mild irritability.
You child has a fever that last more than 36 hours.

Next Visit

Your baby’s next routine visit should be at the age of 9 months. Please bring the shot card to each visit.