I just realized that the recommendation for SIDS is having the baby in my room for 6 months. Yikes. My friend's doctor told her 6 weeks was fine. Either way, I'm looking at a period of time where the baby will not be sleeping in his crib.
I was originally planning to buy an Uppa Baby Vista stroller which comes with a bassinet that the baby could probably sleep in. However, I think I'm going to go with a snap and go, and then jogging stroller instead. I am registering for a Graco Pack and Play with "bassinet" - can the baby safely sleep in that?
I would consider a cosleeper but my side of the bed is basically against a wall, so I don't know how useful that would be.
I swear I will finish this registry soon and stop constantly asking baby product questions!
Re: Where Will Your Baby Sleep?
We used a pack n play for a while, too. We had the bassinet part but didn't really like it and used the main PNP surface instead. It's totally convenient.
Mom to Lily and Colin!
although we're in a one bedroom apartment, so even when we move to a crib baby will be in our room.
TTC #1 since 9/2012
BFP #1 2/16/13, EDD 10/13/13, CP 2/21/13
BFP #2 6/2/13
Baby J-Bug 2/8/14 My Wedding Bio from back in the day
Great conversation! Just went to a class on safe sleep and wanted to share things that can help reduce SIDS and other sudden death accidents due to sleeping conditions.
1. Reduce soft bedding (i.e. pillows, blankets, stuffed animals, toys, and bumpers). There are sleep sacks that can be used to keep babies warm that are more safe than blankets. You can find them at target.
2. Place babies on their back to sleep. Babies are nasal breathers and due to their physical development they cannot turn their heads or bodies if their nose is blocked by soft bedding or other objects. This also true of their chest and bellies if continually pressed on.
3. Co-sleeping is super convenient for exhausted parents but can be very dangerous if the child is accidently rolled on or shifts due to movement by the co-sleeper in the bed or on the couch.
4. Pacifiers can help prevent death from airway constriction because they provide a barrier b/w the nose and soft bedding allowing air to flow in and out of the nose.
5. While there are always acceptions to the rule, most infants are at risk from birth to 4 months due to the lack of head/body control.
6. If the baby is sleeping in a carrier or anything where they are not laying flat make sure they're buckled in. This can help stop them from sliding down and reducing their airway capacity.
7. Most babies that died ( at least in our area - VA) due to the environment had a separate sleep area that was not used.
8. Babies that died from their environment typically did not cry.
For more info please google safe sleeping conditions for babies. I'm sure there is more that I'm missing. Not trying to scare anyone but empower mommies! Whatever you choose for your baby's sleeping conditions make sure you educate all caregivers that may watch your child during their sleep time for safe care. Some deaths can be prevented.
BFP #1 5.26.08 DD born 1.4.09
BFP #2 3.11.12 m/c 3.26.12
BFP #3 10.7.12 m/c 10.27.12
BFP #4 2.24.13 ectopic MTX 3.13.13 Right tube removed 3.29.13
BFP #5 5.27.13 DS born 1.22.14
BFP #6 4.14.16
These arrangements have more to do with the fact that I exclusively nurse my kids, and this is much more convenient for me. I actually get more sleep when my babies are near me at night. The reduced SIDS risk is just a bonus.
I plan to start this LO in a PNP too and just see how it goes.
From https://www.askdrsears.com/news/latest-news/dr-sears-addresses-recent-co-sleeping-concerns
*Cultures who traditionally practice safe co-sleeping, such as Asians, enjoy the lowest incidence of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
*Trusted research by Dr. James McKenna, Director of the Mother-Baby Sleep Laboratory of the University of Notre Dame, showed that mothers and babies who sleep close to each other enjoy similar protective sleep patterns. Mothers enjoy a heightened awareness of their baby’s presence, what I call a “nighttime sleep harmony,” that protects baby. The co-sleeping mother is more aware if her baby’s well-being is in danger.
*Babies who sleep close to their mothers enjoy “protective arousal,” a state of sleep that enables them to more easily awaken if their health is in danger, such as breathing difficulties.
*Co-sleeping makes breastfeeding easier, which provides many health benefits for mother and baby.
*More infant deaths occur in unsafe cribs than in parents' bed.
*Co-sleeping tragedies that have occurred have nearly always been associated with dangerous practices, such as unsafe beds, or parents under the influence of substances that dampen their awareness of baby.
* Research shows that co-sleeping infants cry less during the night, compared to solo sleepers who startle repeatedly throughout the night and spend 4 times the number of minutes crying. Startling and crying releases adrenaline, which can interfere with restful sleep and leads to long term sleep anxiety.
* Infants who sleep near to parents have more stable temperatures, regular heart rhythms, and fewer long pauses in breathing compared to babies who sleep alone. This means baby sleeps physiologically safer.
* A recent large study concluded that bed sharing did NOT increase the risk of SIDS, unless the mom was a smoker or abused alcohol.
For safe co-sleeping:
We recommend using a bassinet that attaches safely and securely to parents’ bed, which allows both mother and baby to have their own sleeping space, while baby still enjoys sleeping close to mommy for easier feeding and comforting.
If bed-sharing, practice these safe precautions:
*Place babies to sleep on their backs.
*Be sure there are no crevices between the mattress and guardrail or headboard that allows baby’s head to sink into.
*Do not allow anyone but mother to sleep next to the baby, since only mothers have that protective awareness of baby. Place baby between mother and a guardrail, not between mother and father. *Father should sleep on the other side of mother.
*Don’t fall asleep with baby on a cushy surface, such as a beanbag, couch, or wavy waterbed.
*Don’t bed-share if you smoke or are under the influence of drugs, alcohol, or medications that affect your sleep.
It worked with DD, but every baby is different.
June/July 2011 - IVF #1 - Transfer cancelled due to OHSS
23 perfect embryos. All 23 made it to freezing!
September/October - FET #1 - October 12th - 2 Grade A embies
October 20th - BFP??! EDD - July 1, 2012
Beta #1 = 154, Beta #2 = 352 Beta #3 = 3,800
U/S #2 - November 14th = 133 bpm! U/S #3 & 4 - November 30th and December 7th = 163 bpm! U/S#5 - January 30th - TEAM PINK!!!
Baby Sweets born on her due date!
We were also taught that the rolling over on your baby while sleeping thing is almost an old wives' tale.
Most injuries/deaths happen from unsafe practices (mentioned above).
June/July 2011 - IVF #1 - Transfer cancelled due to OHSS
23 perfect embryos. All 23 made it to freezing!
September/October - FET #1 - October 12th - 2 Grade A embies
October 20th - BFP??! EDD - July 1, 2012
Beta #1 = 154, Beta #2 = 352 Beta #3 = 3,800
U/S #2 - November 14th = 133 bpm! U/S #3 & 4 - November 30th and December 7th = 163 bpm! U/S#5 - January 30th - TEAM PINK!!!
Baby Sweets born on her due date!
When LO was first home, we put him in the bassinet part (it was basically a raised whole surface of the PnP not the sleeper that some have) of the PnP. At ~8wks, H kept coming in to find me asleep in bed but sitting up, with LO on my lap because I had zonked out nursing him at 3a. That's when we decided it was time to start bed-sharing because what was happening wasn't safe. We set up the crib along side the bed as a cosleeper, so one side was taken off and mattresses were flush (we lucked out everything lined up perfectly). And LO started off in his crib, but would end up next to me. I researched safe bedsharing, and made sure to do everything right. Never worried about rolling onto baby, often we'd wake up in the same place we fell asleep and he was able to roll over, latch on and nurse and we'd both get extra sleep. Right before turning 2, we transitioned him out and LO is now sleeping mostly through the night (some times he wakes 1x rarely twice) in his own room/bed. And interestingly when he wakes up he calls for me to come to him, he's stopped coming up into our bed on his own. I mention that because some people will act like kids will never want their own bed if you bedshare ever. My experience, and that of people I know who've also bedshared, have not found that to be true at all. Children will naturally crave more and more independence as they grow, including their sleep space.
I plan to do the same for #2, for the first 4-6m at least but I'd like to move LO out of our room sooner than 2yrs. We're thinking around 1yr-18m max, but we'll see how it all works out. We had zero issues with the transition for #1, and I think it's partly because he was old enough/ready to be out so it wasn't something we forced on him.
Regarding the RnP/flathead, I've known people who used them without issue so I can't help but wonder how much is situation dependent and not the item itself. We used it for day time sleep and never had a concern about his head/neck, in fact, he never got a bald spot so many babies get on the back of their head. If you constantly have LO on her back in a seat - carseat, swing, etc. you're going to run the risk of those issues. And some kids are more prone to wry necks which can worsen flat head. We tried to lessen our risk by holding LO, or using the carrier, in lieu of swing/bouncy seat.
Our son will sleep in his crib but it will be in our room since we have a one bedroom apartment. Our bed and the crib will be on opposite walls and if I feel the need to have him closer, we'll get a bassinet or a RNP, a PNP won't fit in the room.
We plan on getting a two bedroom apt after our lease is up in June but if it doesn't happen it's not a big deal to me. I figure if he's crying in a separate room, I have to get up, go to the room and get him. This is just eliminating one of the steps.
TTC: 8/11 BFP: 5/13 EDD:2/2/14 Born 1/13/14
The idea is that the mother has a protective "awareness" that is extra finely tuned while breast feeding. You seriously awaken to every rustle or sigh. It's also been proven that women are biologically programmed to be woken by high-pitch sounds (I.e. Baby cry) while men are biologically programmed to awaken by low-pitch sounds (I.e. A predator or burglar). While my husband would put his life on the line for our children, he's rolled on me in his sleep without knowing so there's no way I'd let a defenseless baby sleep next to him. DS slept between me and a bed rail.
So yes, these statement are made based on biological programming. Women were programmed to sleep with and nurse infants. This does not mean everyone chooses this route, but like men can't nurse, men weren't programmed to be aware of and to protect an infant while it sleeps.
This makes me feel horrible. I rolled over on my son and the only way I knew was because my husband woke me up. We kept my son in our room in a cradle 99.9% of the time and my husband would always wake up first. I always thought he was a light sleeper and I am a heavy one. I know it seems like a silly comment to make, but I wonder why I wasnt given this mother intuition.
Oh no, don't feel horrible! I also don't completely trust myself and my instincts, so I follow a little trick I read : if you sleep on your side with "under arm" (left arm when on your left side) straight out, you can't roll into your own arm. So, I slept on my left side with left arm out and baby sleeping pretty much in my armpit. I liked the added assurance that it was physically impossible to roll on him.
"Beanie" Natural 7w MC 11/21/12
"Nole" stopped growing at 7w3d D&E 2/11/13
Diagnosed with MTHFR and Factor V Leiden on 4/3/13
Due with RAINBOW GIRL 2/10/15
~ Married 10.30.04 ~
DS1 born 12.31.11 ~ DS2 born 2.4.14
Isabella will use a PNP in my room and I will go from there.