• Reviews around ingredient (2.05 of 5)

    Enfamil D-Vi-Sol Vitamin D Supplement Drops for Infants 50 mL dropper bottle (Packaging May Vary)

    • Has many gross unnecessary ingredients
    • Read the label - there are so many inactive ingredients in these drops, and at least one of them was upsetting our baby’s stomach.
    • After looking at the reviews of this product as well as the ingredients, we decided to switch to Carlson's, which has no scary ingredients to feed a baby
    • I agree with all those reviewers who previously complained about the unnecessary artificial ingredients in this product
    • After looking at the reviews of this product as well as the ingredients, we decided to switch to Carlson's, which has no scary ingredients to feed a baby
    • Please also do not purchase this or other Enfamil multivitamins due to the problematic ingredients.
    • We were concerned about all of the unnecessary ingredients in this product, in particular the artificial flavors and coloring and other chemicals, especially given recent research about artificial color consumption having detrimental behavioral effects on kids
    • Also, d-vi-sol has a long list of questionable ingredients, Thorne does not.
    • As many have mentioned, I wish the caramel color wasn't in there, but I don't think the other ingredients are bad and I feel a little safer with their shelf life and allergy sensitivity than the one in coconut oil.
    • Please do not just take my word for it research these harmful ingredients
    • Also, it has polysorbate 80 in it as an emulsifier which is a questionable ingredient and not in many other drops
    • Why would a simple Vitamin D supplement need so many extra -questionable- ingredients
    • After reading the highly toxic ingredients on the label, I wouldn't give this to my dog.
    • Even if I give him my pinky to suck as I also put the dropper in his mouth, he spits some of it out or it spills out, which means he doesn't get the full dose (and it's impossible to figure out how much he spit out, so you can't exactly give him a precise amount of extra to make up for it), and it's wasteful of an expensive product.
    • Read the ingredients and buy a healthier Vit D for your baby!
    • Do your calculation not by now many fl oz you get, but by how many days worth of vitamin D you get.
    • Great way to get a baby the vitamin D they need.
    • Mommy's Bliss makes an excellent Vitamin D supplement that you only need a single drop of
    • Enfamil Vitamin D drops contain 400IU of vitamin D which is 100% of the recommended dosage for Children/infants under the age of 4.The vitamin D drops are specifically recommend for babies who are at least partially breastfeed or not getting enough vitamin D in their daily diet
    • Apparently breastfed babies don't get enough vitamin D, and the only other way to get vitamin D is to have direct sun exposure to unprotected skin (on a tiny baby, no thank you).
    • Apparently breastfed babies don't get enough Vitamin D, so you have to supplement
    • Even if I give him my pinky to suck as I also put the dropper in his mouth, he spits some of it out or it spills out, which means he doesn't get the full dose (and it's impossible to figure out how much he spit out, so you can't exactly give him a precise amount of extra to make up for it), and it's wasteful of an expensive product.