Sleep sacks and sufficient layers of clothing are safe alternatives to blankets for children less than six months of age ||Try to keep other elements of your baby's routine as normal as possible during the strike. ||Children who gain weight quickly during their first six months are more likely to be obese or at risk of obesity by age 3 ||Colostrum is rich with all what baby needs for the first 2-3 days till the breast begins to produce milk ||Preservatives, fragrances, harsh soap, rough fabric, sweat, and stress can be potential irritants for babies suffering from eczema ||If every feeding is painful or your baby isn't gaining weight, ask a lactation consultant or your baby's doctor for help ||When your infant is carried, he should be oriented toward the carrying adult ||Stop the continuous criticism to your teens. Highlight their qualities instead. ||Presumably, your baby won't recall events from his life before age 3. Still, these early experiences outline his vision of the world ||Infants raised on breast milk tend to score higher on tests of mental development than those on formula ||
Kids to Stay in Rear-Facing Seat Until Age 2

 

March 21, 2011 -- In a new policy statement published in the April 2011 issue of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Pediatrics now advises parents to keep toddlers in rear-facing car seats until age 2, or until they exceed the height or weight limit for the car seat, which can be found on the back of the seat.

In addition, they recommend that when children 2 or older reach the maximum weight or height for a forward-facing seat with a harness they transition to sitting in belt-positioning booster seats until they have reached 144 cm tall and are between 8 and 12 years old.

Once they've outgrown the booster seat, the guidelines say all children under 13 should still ride in the back seats of the car.

Rear-Facing Seats Are Safer

The previous AAP policy, issued in 2002, advised that infants and toddlers remain in rear-facing safety seats until they reached the limits of the car seat, but cited 12 months and 20 pounds as a minimum. As a result, many parents turned the car seat around on the child's first birthday.

But new research has shown that children under age 2 are safer in rear-facing car seats. A 2007 study in the journal Injury Prevention found that children under age 2 are 75 percent less likely to die or to be severely injured in a crash if they are rear-facing. Another study found riding rear-facing to be five times safer than forward-facing.

A rear-facing child safety seat does a better job of supporting the head, neck and spine of infants and toddlers in a crash, because it distributes the force of the collision over the entire body.

The ‘age 2’ recommendation is not a deadline, but rather a guideline to help parents decide when to make the transition. Smaller children can remain rear-facing longer.

Types of Car Safety Seats at a Glance

 

Source

American Academy of Pediatrics

 

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