Ddrops Organic Baby 400 IU 90 Drops - Daily Vitamin D Liquid for Infants. Supports Teeth & Bone Health. No Preservatives, No Sugar, Non-GMO, Allergy-Friendly
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Lydia
> 24 hourAs a new parent, I love things that make your life easier, and *this* is one of those products. My pediatrician recommended this to us during her two weeks checkup. Its so easy to drop it inside her mouth or put it on one of my fingers for her to lick. With other liquid droppers, my baby would fuss and fuss. As soon as we put it in her mouth, she would spit it out. I didnt think she would be capable of doing that at one month old, but I guess if they hate it enough, they would find a way! One thing to watch out for is that youre not supposed to finish the bottle. I didnt realize this until I realized the drops werent coming out as fast anymore. After 90 days, be sure to order a new one!
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Ribecca D-N
> 24 hourLove it for both my LO. When my older one was a baby, she was given this Ddrop. Now, for the younger LO, this is the only one he uses too. I like the fact thats its one drop, with little coconut oil! and nothing else/more
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Sari Hardyal
> 24 hourWe got this brand of vitamin D drops as a sample from our pediatrician and the baby likes them, so we got the full-sized bottle. The drip top of this bottle is easy to use (easier than the sample), and isn’t messy. The drops are flavorless (to me), and our baby likes them and doesn’t have any trouble with excess gas or upset tummy from them.
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Sarah Pennington
> 24 hourI love that I can just put one drop on before my baby nurses and she gets the recommended amount of vitamin d. Before this, I was putting it in her bottle and she wouldn’t always finish the whole thing so I didn’t know if she was getting enough. The only downside is that it can be hard to get the drop out of the bottle. And then you have to be careful it doesn’t rub off onto your clothes or the baby before she starts nursing.
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musings987
> 24 hourInitially, because Im a breastfeeding mom, my doctor recommended Di-V-Sol. It was syrupy and disgusting. My daughter hated it and nothing I tried prevented her from spitting it out, creating a sticky mess all over her face, neck and fingers. I switched to this with my pediatricians blessing. The important thing to remember, and the reason I think more pediatricians dont recommend this, is that unlike the Di-V-Sol, where an entire dropper is one dosage, with these, just one drop is the dosage, so its important not to give your child too much. Its best to just put a single drop on your finger or nipple, and then putting your finger or nipple in your childs mouth, rather than dropping it directly into your childs mouth. As long as you do that, theres really no reason to go through the hassle of administering an entire 1ml syringe of Di-V-Sol.
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Bubbab315
> 24 hourDont buy it on here if you can avoid it. Its much cheaper anywhere else if you can find it.
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arron thompson
> 24 hourI’m hoping the quality is good but my infant has yet to articulate its efficacy to me. However, it does seem a little unnecessarily hard to get out of the bottle, but not impossible.
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A W.
> 24 hourOrdered Ddrops and Upspring drops since they appeared to be basically the same (fractionated coconut oil is the only ingredient besides vitamin D) and Upspring was less expensive. I’ll be buying the Ddrops from now one for the dispenser alone. Both really were flavorless (I tasted), neither caused any gastric disturbance for my baby, but Ddrops was far easier to dispense (and let’s face it, none are easy - picture coordinating a squirming, hungry baby and drop rolling - you’ve got about 10 seconds). I expected Ddrops to have a dropper because of other reviews, but you just turn the bottle upside down and wait for the drop. Upspring was similar, but it’s hard to get a full drop and it didn’t drip well from the bottle. Ddrops is much better.
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veronica
> 24 hourI want to say first I havent used any other types of vitamin D. My experience with this has been a good one. My baby didnt have any adverse reactions to the drops. The only complaint it is harder the know if the 1 single drop was actually ingested because its only 1 single drop. Trying to get a drop on a nipple with a wiggly baby is hard enough, once its on then my baby moves her head towards me and Im not sure if the drop transferred to her face or got in her mouth. Once baby started eating solids its been a whole new story. I cant imagine using any other product. In all I recommend , my advice is to give on your finger, pacifier, or spoon because the breastfeeding method is harder then it would seem. Also keep in mind if you purchase the bottle is not full, its only about 1/4 a bottle. It clearly states this on the box.
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Cailin
> 24 hourWould be much easier to use with a dropper