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How to Make Sure Your Baby Is Safe & Sound
When you're a new parent, dangers seem to lurk everywhere. Yes, you need to be vigilant, but don't go overboard with worry. Rather, take these simple precautions to keep your baby out of harm's way.
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Safe From SIDS Although the cause of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is still a mystery, there are ways to significantly reduce your baby's risk.
- Unless your newborn has a medical condition that prevents
back sleeping (check with his doctor), always place him on
his back to sleep-and make sure that his other caregivers do
so, too. Though putting babies to sleep on their stomach was
the norm until a few years ago, the number of SIDS-related
deaths has plunged more than 40 percent since 1992, when the
American Academy of Pediatrics began recommending back
sleeping.
- Never use soft bedding such as pillows, comforters, or
sheepskins in your baby's crib, cradle, or bassinet.
Instead, use a fitted sheet and a blanket sleeper.
- Keep stuffed animals out of a crib, cradle, or bassinet.
Never put your infant down to sleep on a waterbed.
- Keep his room a comfortable temperature and don't
overdress him, as overheating may contribute to SIDS.
- Don't smoke around your baby, and don't allow anyone else to.
Avoiding Burns Don't hold your baby while cooking or while carrying hot food or drinks.
Crib Cautions
- Buy a crib that meets current safety standards (check for
the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association seal).
- If you're using a secondhand crib, make sure that its slats are no more than 2 3/8 inches apart, that it doesn't have high corner
posts or decorative cutouts, and that it hasn't been covered
with lead paint. Hang crib mobiles out of your baby's reach
and remove them when he can get up on his hands and knees.
- Never tie toys to the crib; the strings are a strangling
hazard.
- Keep lamps, heaters, and other electrical appliances and
their cords away from the crib.
- Position the crib well away from curtain ties and cords attached to blinds.
Toy Safety
- Check for buttons, eyes, beads, bows, and other small
parts that could detach and choke your baby.
- When buying plastic toys, select ones with smooth,
rounded edges.
- Avoid toys with ribbons or strings longer than six
inches, which can become wrapped around an infant's neck and
cause strangulation.
- Don't let your baby hold any toy small enough to fit through a toilet-paper tube-it could be a choking hazard.
Monitoring Your Baby If your newborn is out of earshot, use a baby monitor so you can hear him if he cries. Check the monitor frequently to make sure it's on the right channel and the batteries are working.
Preventing Falls
- Many babies love the bath-time ritual, and it often
helps them relax before bed. Until your baby can sit up on
his own, it's easiest and safest to bathe him in a plastic
baby tub.
- Never leave your baby unattended on his changing table, a
sofa, a bed, or another high perch from which he could fall.
During diaper changes, use the changing table's safety
strap, but remember that it's no substitute for keeping a
steadying hand on your infant's body at all times.
- Make sure the drop side of your baby's crib is in the
"up" position whenever he's in it.
- If the sound of the washer or dryer soothes your fussy baby, go ahead and perch his bouncy seat on the floor next to it. But never leave him in a seat on top of one of these appliances.
©2004 The Parenting Group Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be copied or reproduced without permission from The Parenting Group Inc. PARENTING is a registered trademark of The Parenting Group Inc., a Time Inc. company.
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