Keep your baby nourished and full with formula take more than sticking the bottle in their mouth.
* mix and wait: Let powdered formula sit for a minute after mixing. That way, you allow gas bubbles up, minimizing the amount of air baby's belly.
* get in position: To make sure your baby is getting mostly milk and not air, angle the bottle downwards. The nipple should be filled with formula during the entire feeding session. Otherwise, air bubbles may get trapped under the formula in her tummy,"If baby swallows less air, she has less to burp or spit up,"
* keep baby's head high: Newborns dont have the ability to keep food down on their own. To lessen spit up, make sure your infant is upright, with her head higher than her stomach, during feedings.
* burp: Your baby can't tell you when she has gas. And some babies are naturally better at burping than others. During a feeding, take a break every few minutes to allow your baby to burp. Walker offers this alternative to patting baby on the back: Sit your baby on your lap, one hand resting with the pinky just below the rib cage and the other hand on the lower back, Move the second hand up the back, gently rubbing and squeezing as you go all the way to the shoulders. Also, try gently lying your baby down and sitting her back up. The combination of methods should produce good burps.