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When Baby Cries a Lot icon

When Baby Cries a Lot


  • Useful things to know if you bottle feed your baby
  • About paced bottle feeding
  • Your baby's position when bottle feeding
  • Following your baby's cues for bottle feeds
  • Building a positive relationship with food through paced bottle feeding
  • When does your baby have a conditioned dialling up with the bottle and what to do about it?

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  • When Baby Cries a Lot
  • S3: #2. Does your baby have a problem with feeds?
  • CH 3: Bottle feeds

About paced bottle feeding

Dr Pamela Douglas22nd of Sep 20232nd of Jan 2026

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What is paced bottle feeding?

Many families find they would like to know how to use a bottle in a way that is best for their baby and which feels as close to breastfeeding as possible. We call this approach ‘paced bottle feeding’.

We recommend feeding by 'cued care' – that is, babies are offered the bottle whenever they seem to want milk, and only until they communicate or cue they are full. In general, older healthy infants will cue for feeds every few hours. Newborns and young infants vary in their needs, typically up to twelve times or more daily, and we need to be flexible when responding to their cues. Being flexible means offering the bottle at any time and place that works for you and your baby.

This will mean that your baby will probably take different amounts at each feed. Notice total daily amounts over a week or two if your baby is only formula fed, to make sure that overall these amounts are not too large, rather than aiming for a set amount for each feed.

We recommend using a simple narrow neck teat, which works best for most babies. The wide-necked teats do not better imitate the breast, despite what you might hear, and sometimes cause problems!

Read more articles about how to do paced bottle feeding

Useful things to know if you bottle feed your baby

Your baby's position when bottle feeding

Following your baby's cues for bottle feeds

Building a positive relationship with food through paced bottle feeding

When does your baby have a conditioned dialling up with the bottle and what to do about it?

Acknowledgements

These pages on bottle feeding in the Brief & simple summary of When baby cries a lot were co-written with Renee Keogh RN IBCLC, Founding NDC Educator.

I'm grateful to Professor Sophie Havighurst, Ros June, and Caroline Ma at Mindful, The University of Melbourne, for their feedback on the articles and videos in When baby cries a lot in the first few months of life. They helped me keep the language plain and the concepts as accessible as possible, for this brief and simple version of the Possums 5-domain approach to the crying baby.

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Your baby's position when bottle feeding

baby bottle feeding in mothers arms

Ensure you are comfortable and supported by pillows if needed. Hold your baby in an upright position with neck and bottom well supported and baby leaning slightly back, with their head also tilted back. Try having your baby’s neck in the crook of your arm with baby’s bottom on your thigh (on the same side as the arm holding baby). Baby’s chin should not be tilted down towards their chest as it is hard to suck and swallow in this position.

Your baby needs to be well supported and their head and spine in a mostly straight line. We don’t want that little spine to be bending backwards in a banana shape…

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Possums acknowledges the traditional owners of the lands upon which The Possums Programs have been created, the Yuggera and Turrbal Peoples. We acknowledge that First Nations have breastfed, slept with, and lovingly raised their children on Australian lands for at least 65,000 years, to become the oldest continuous living culture on Earth. Possums stands with the Uluru Statement from the Heart.