Use each feeding as an opportunity to build your newborn's sense of security, trust and comfort. ||Massaging infants' arms and hands can significantly reduce their pain from needle sticks ||You'll develop a unique parenting style that is right for your family and may be quite different from your neighbors and friends. ||If every feeding is painful or your baby isn't gaining weight, ask a lactation consultant or your baby's doctor for help ||Make sure the highchair has a wide base, good fit, adjustable secure straps. Consider a post between the child's legs. ||Never pick up your infant by the hands or wrists as this can put stress on the elbows. Lifting under the armpits is the safest way ||Bathe baby for no more than ten minutes in warm water especially if he shows signs of skin eczema. ||Reading aloud will help your baby be a better reader when she's older ||Plan for regular family meals. Enjoy being together as a family and give a chance for everyone to decompress from the day ||Don't ever be afraid to ask for help from a friend or relative. Time away will let you recharge. ||
Help Children Overcome Bedwetting

 

Physicians rule out first medical causes, such as constipation or infection and they look more closely at the causes occurring next to psychological stress or trauma. If no medical or psychological causes for bedwetting can be found, the family can move on to ways to help the child stop bedwetting. Treatments include:

  • Bed/Personal Enuresis alarms ‐ These alarms work by waking the child when they start to wet during the night so they can empty their bladder in the toilet, ultimately sensitizing the child to respond quickly and appropriately to a full bladder during sleep. Urinary bed alarms are generally regarded as the most effective bedwetting treatment for the long term.
  • Rewards for Dry Nights. This can involve giving the child a small toy after a dry night or rewarding him with a trip to the park or someplace else he wants to go. Don’t punish him and try to understand this is not his fault.
  • Lifting. This strategy involves making sure your child goes to the bathroom right before his bedtime, and then waking him up after he has been asleep two or three hours and taking him to the toilet.
  • Fluid Restriction. Limiting fluids at night is widely suggested but can be difficult to do.
  • Waterproof Sheets Plastic sheets and disposable underwear can save sanity and mattresses. You can also layer a plastic sheet, regular sheet and a blanket; then repeat the process as a double bubble.
  • Medications:
  • Bladder Retraining and bladder relaxant medication ‐ Treatment to improve bladder overactivity requires bladder retraining in combination with a bladder relaxant medication. Bladder Retraining can involve increased fluid intake and toilet trips. This Helps relax the muscle around the bladder so it doesn’t contract and empty before it’s full.
  • Antidiuretic Medication ‐ this is a medication which, when taken at bedtime, results in decreased urine production during the night and reduces the risk of bedwetting.

 

Bedwetting Do’s and Dont’s

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