Milk standard for full-term babies

Normally, the amount of milk for a full-term baby is about 80 ml per time, and about 500-800 ml per day. The amount of milk per day varies from one full-term baby to another due to differences in weight, dietary patterns, digestion and absorption abilities, and stomach capacity. Usually the amount of milk for a full-term baby is around 80 ml at one time, and the amount of milk per day is around 500~800 ml. When feeding babies, mothers need to carefully observe their babies’ hunger status and take feeding on demand as the basic principle. If the baby still cries and keeps sucking on the bottle after feeding, it means the baby is not full and the mother can increase the amount of milk appropriately. After the full moon, the mother needs to slowly raise the baby to eat regularly, and can feed every 3~4 hours. If the baby can finish the milk every time and the daily weight is increasing in a scientific and stable way, then it means that the baby’s milk quantity is more appropriate. When your baby develops uncomfortable symptoms during feeding, you should seek medical advice promptly.