Stop the continuous criticism to your teens. Highlight their qualities instead. ||Breastfeeding releases Oxytocin which causes contractions of the uterus, helping to stop hemorrhage and initiating weight loss ||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 ||You'll develop a unique parenting style that is right for your family and may be quite different from your neighbors and friends. ||Look for early signs of hunger, such as stirring and stretching, sucking motions and lip movements. Fussing and crying are later cues ||Contact the doctor if your newborn isn't gaining weight, wets fewer than six diapers a day or shows little interest in feedings ||If you have trouble emptying your breast, apply warm compresses to the breast or take a warm shower before breast-feeding ||To help your kid stand up to negative peer pressure, encourage him to talk, use role playing with him, get to know the parents of your child's friends and finally deal with your own peer pressure. ||Toddler's appetite may change almost daily. Let her be the judge of how much she needs and wants to eat. ||During growth spurts - around 6 weeks after birth — your newborn might want to be fed more often ||
Abusive Head Trauma

 

Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS) is a form of abusive head trauma (AHT). Abusive head trauma results from injuries caused by someone vigorously shaking a child. Shaking a baby is a serious form of child abuse that occurs mostly in infants in the first year of life. Babies (newborn to 4 months) are at greatest risk of injury from shaking.

When someone forcefully shakes a baby, the child's head rotates about the neck uncontrollably because infants' neck muscles aren't well developed and provide little support for their heads. This violent movement pitches the infant's brain back and forth within the skull, sometimes rupturing blood vessels and nerves throughout the brain and tearing the brain tissue. Serious injuries associated with abusive head trauma may include blindness or eye injuries, brain damage, damage to the spinal cord, and delay in normal development.

Normal interaction with a child, like bouncing the baby on a knee, will not cause these injuries. It's important to never shake a baby under any circumstances.

Research shows that shaking most often results from crying or other factors that may trigger the person caring for the baby to become frustrated or angry. The fact is that crying—including long bouts of inconsolable crying—is normal developmental behavior in infants.

If you feel as if you might lose control when caring for your baby, the American Academy of pediatrics recommends the following:

  • Take a deep breath and count to ten.
  • Put your baby in her crib or another safe place, leave the room, and let her cry alone.
  • Call a friend or relative for emotional support.
  • Give your pediatrician a call. Perhaps there’s a medical reason why your baby is crying.

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