The pharmacy sells anti-reflux formula for $8 more per can. The pediatrician says try positioning first. I say try both.
Reflux is the bane of new parents. Spit-up everywhere. Laundry mountain. Baby crying. You desperate. I have been there. Jack had reflux until month 5. Emma never did. Same parents, same formula, different digestive systems.
First, know the difference. Normal spit-up: small amounts, baby is content after. Reflux: frequent, large amounts, baby is uncomfortable, arching back, crying. If it is just spit-up, you do not need to do anything. It is normal. Annoying, but normal.
For true reflux, the hierarchy of interventions:
Step 1: Positioning. Keep baby upright for 20-30 minutes after feeds. Elevate the head of the crib slightly. Burp frequently during feeds. These cost nothing and help many babies.
Step 2: Thickened formula. Anti-reflux formulas have added rice starch. The thicker consistency stays down better. It helps about 50% of reflux babies. It costs more. It can cause constipation. Try it for 2 weeks. If no improvement, stop.
Step 3: Smaller, more frequent feeds. Instead of 120ml every 3 hours, try 80ml every 2 hours. Less volume in the stomach = less to reflux. This is exhausting but effective.
Step 4: Medication. If positioning, thickened formula, and feed changes do not help, talk to your pediatrician about medication. H2 blockers or PPIs can reduce acid and help healing. They are safe for infants when prescribed.
I tried thickened formula for Jack. It helped slightly. What actually fixed it was time. By month 5, his digestive system matured and the reflux stopped. Most reflux resolves by 6-12 months as the lower esophageal sphincter strengthens.
Do not blame the formula. Most reflux is anatomical — the valve between stomach and esophagus is immature. Switching formulas rarely fixes it unless there is an allergy component. Focus on management, not blame.
Track symptoms with our Allergy Tracker to rule out CMPA, which can mimic reflux symptoms.