What to Expect the First Year (3 page)

BOOK: What to Expect the First Year
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Not Sitting Still for Bottles?

Got Cow's Milk? Not Yet.

Fussy Eating Habits

Self-Feeding

Stick with Some Cereal

Strange Stools

Still Hairless

Still Toothless

Teething Pain and Night Crying

How to Care for Baby Hair

Pulling Up

Not Pulling Up

Flat Feet

Walking Too Early?

Slow to Sit, Slow to Go?

When in Doubt, Check It Out

Fear of Strangers

Comfort Objects

When Crib Slats Become Foot Traps

ALL ABOUT: Games Babies Play

Chapter 15

The Tenth Month

Feeding Your Baby: Eating Well for Beginners

Baby Basics at a Glance: Tenth Month

Bring Baby to the Table

Healthy Baby Eating

Getting a Head Start on Healthy Eating Habits

Is It Done Yet?

What You May Be Wondering About

Messy Eating Habits

Head Banging, Rocking, and Rolling

Hair Twirling or Pulling

Biting

Made with the Shades

Blinking

Breath Holding

For the Adoptive Parent: Telling Baby

Fears

The Baby Social Scene

Starting Classes

ALL ABOUT: The Beginning of Discipline

Spanking: Don't Do It

Discipline That Works

Losing Control

Chapter 16

The Eleventh Month

Feeding Your Baby: Weaning from the Bottle

Baby Basics at a Glance: Eleventh Month

What You May Be Wondering About

Bowed Legs

Falls

Shoes for Walking

Not Pulling Up Yet

Baby Tooth Injuries

Boo-Boos Happen

Growth Swings

Snacking

Snacking Smarts

Increased Separation Anxiety

Bedtime Separation Anxiety

Playing on Team Blue, Team Pink … or Team Neutral?

Giving Up on a Nap

For Parents: Thinking About the Next Baby

“Forgetting” a Skill

ALL ABOUT: Baby Talk for the Older Baby

Chapter 17

The Twelfth Month

Feeding Your Baby: Weaning from the Breast

Baby Basics at a Glance: Twelfth Month

When to Wean

How to Wean from the Breast

For Parents: Making the Breast Adjustment

What You May Be Wondering About

Not Yet Walking

Shyness

Handle with Care

The First Birthday Party

Social Skills

Putting the Weaned Baby to Bed

Switching to a Bed

Using a Pillow and a Blanket

A Drop in Appetite

Don't Have a Cow

Increase in Appetite

Refusing to Self-Feed

Going Nuts?

Growing Independence

Negativity

The Second Year… Continued

Watching TV

Technology for Tots

ALL ABOUT: Stimulating Your 1-Year-Old

The Eyes Have It … Already

Keep Your Toddler Safe from … Your Toddler

Chapter 18

Traveling with Your Baby

On the Go with Your Baby

Traveling by Car

Traveling by Plane

Traveling by Train

Chapter 19

Keeping Your Baby Healthy

What You Can Expect at Checkups

First Test Results

For Parents: The Pediatrician's Role in Postpartum Depression

Making the Most of Those Monthly Checkups

Immunizations

The ABCs of DTaPs … and MMRs … and IPVs …

For the Adoptive Parent: Adoption Medicine

Vaccine Smarts

For Parents: Vaccines—They're Not Just for Kids

Staying Up-to-Date

Vaccines for an Adopted Baby

The Reality About Immunization Myths

Recommended Immunization Schedule

Calling the Doctor

When to Call the Doctor

Parent's Intuition

Before You Call the Doctor

Figuring Out Fever

Taking Your Baby's Temperature

Evaluating the Temperature

Treating a Fever

Febrile Convulsions

ALL ABOUT: Medication

Getting Medication Information

Giving Medicine Safely

Acetaminophen or Ibuprofen?

Don't Give These to Your Baby

Herbal Remedies

Helping the Medicine Go Down

Dose Right

The Most Common Infant Illnesses

Common Cold

The Frequent Cold Program

Allergies This Year?

Ear Infection

Some Probiotics with Those Antibiotics?

Flu

Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)

For Parents: Keeping Your Germs to Yourself

Croup

Containing Germs

Constipation

Diarrhea

Signs of Dehydration

Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)

A Better Juice for Your Sick Baby?

The Most Common Chronic Conditions

Asthma

Asthma … or RAD?

Celiac Disease

Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)

Projectile Vomiting

The Special-Needs Baby

Hearing Loss or Impairment

Hearing Loss Due to Fluid in Ears

Chapter 20

Treating Injuries

Preparing for Emergencies

ED or ER

First Aid in the First Year

Abdominal Injuries

Bites

Bleeding

Bleeding, Internal

Broken Bones or Fractures

Bruises, Skin

Burns

Chemical Burns

Choking

Cold Injuries

Convulsions

Cuts

Dislocation

Dog Bites

Drowning (Submersion Injury)

Ear Injuries

Electric Shock

Eye Injury

Fainting/Loss of Consciousness

Finger and Toe Injuries

Making a Boo-Boo Better

Foreign Objects

Fractures

Frostbite and Frostnip

Head Injuries

Heat Injuries

Hyperthermia

Hypothermia

Insect Stings or Bites

Lip, Split or Cut

Mouth Injuries

Nose Injuries

Poisoning

Poison Ivy, Poison Oak, Poison Sumac

Puncture Wounds

Scalds

Scrapes

Seizures

Severed Limb or Digit

Shock

Skin Wounds

Snakebites

Spider Bites

Splinters

Sunburn

Swallowed Foreign Objects

Teeth, Injury to

Tick Bites

Toe Injuries

Tongue, Injury to

Choking and Breathing Emergencies for Babies

When Baby is Choking

CPR: The Most Important Skill You'll Hopefully Never Need

For Older Babies

Breathing and Cardiopulmonary Emergencies

C-A-B

Activate Emergency Medical System Now

When Breathing Returns

Chapter 21

The Low-Birthweight Baby

Feeding Your Baby: Nutrition for the Preterm or Low-Birthweight Infant

Feeding in the Hospital

Early Weight Loss

Expressing Milk for a Premature Baby

Feeding Challenges

Feeding at Home

What You May Be Wondering About

Bonding

Kangaroo Care

Look at the NICU

NICU Words to Know

Being Part of Your Baby's Team

Portrait of a Preemie

Handling a Long NICU Stay

The Emotional Roller Coaster

Preemies by Category

Give Yourself a Break

Breastfeeding

Handling a Tiny Baby

Sending Baby Home

Permanent Problems

For Siblings: The Littlest Sib

Home Care for Preterm Babies

Catching Up

Preemie Vaccines

Car Seats

ALL ABOUT: Health Problems Common in Low-Birthweight Babies

CPR Training: Don't Go Home Without It

Rehospitalization

First Year Moments & Milestones

Index

Foreword
A New Baby Bible

The first year of life is like no other—and it's arguably the year that most impacts all the years that follow: how healthy they are, how happy they are, even how many of them there are. Clearly, the first is a very big year for those so little.

Take growth, with a typical doubling of birth weight in the first 20 weeks and a tripling of birth weight by the first birthday. Length (or height, by the time your child is standing at a year) has increased by perhaps 50 percent, and brain growth (as roughly measured by head circumference) has increased by 30 percent.

One-year-olds are already 40 percent of their adult height, and their brains are nearly 80 percent of adult size. Who else but an infant grows 10 inches in a year? But physical growth is not the most remarkable change. Within minutes and hours of birth, a baby's physiology remarkably transforms from one that is suited only for intrauterine life to one that can survive
unattached
. Before birth, oxygen comes not from the air but from the mother's blood circulating to the placenta. Unborn babies get nutrition by that same route, bypassing their unused digestive tracts. Likewise, for eliminating most of the products of metabolism. But, as the umbilical cord is cut, blood flow dramatically shifts from placenta to lungs, and breathing is established to exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide. Not long after, as the newborn baby is put to breast or bottle, the digestive tract is also recruited to do its new job.

Fortunately, parents do not need to do much to make all this happen. The transitions at birth mostly occur automatically, flawlessly, and on schedule. Without minimizing the challenges of pregnancy, labor, and delivery, mothers (and fathers, too) soon realize that greater challenges lie ahead. Namely, nurturing a newborn's development.

* * *

Most of the behavioral repertoire of newborns is—to use a popular, but imperfect term—
hardwired
. A new-born's brain and nervous system are preprogrammed to do what babies need to do to survive and to thrive—at least initially. Babies are programmed to cry, to suck. They are programmed to startle and to be soothed. Without thinking, they provide eye contact to their parents. And, gratefully, they are programmed to smile. Babies do not need to be taught to enjoy their parents' voices and songs, and they have built-in
clocks to eventually accommodate their parents' daily rhythms of wake and sleep—though this accommodation may not happen right away, as many of you will soon learn.

But, returning to the machine metaphor of a baby's brain being “wired,” for development over the early months, it is important to know that there is an early and ongoing process of
rewiring
. This is because the neural pathways in babies' brains are highly plastic. Rewiring (think: fine-tuning) of the brains of infants and toddlers has been an important and central insight of modern neuroscience research. Learning language and motor skills, developing social skills, being able to process new information by exploring the world with all of the senses, and particularly listening to the human voice, all help rewire the infant's brain. Listening to stories being read and playing with parents on the living room floor are examples of neuroscience in action. Parenthood is largely about reshaping and fine-tuning these neural pathways. For brain development, the first 3 years are most important, but the first 12 months are critical. Parents have tremendous influence over how well this happens—by providing for their infant's physical and emotional needs, by keeping their child safe and healthy, and by facilitating early learning.

This all sounds like a huge responsibility—not only like a job for a grown-up, but a job for a professional. And, if this is your first baby, you will not be alone in feeling, at times, under-prepared for the job … and overwhelmed by it. And yet how could it be that the responsibility for overseeing this most important year in a child's life is given to the parents with the least experience—new parents?

But, fortunately, just as newborns are endowed with some essential survival tools, so are parents. Parental instinct may not kick in as swiftly and automatically as a newborn's—but that's okay. Between the nurturing parents received themselves as newborns and the nurturing (and support, and advice) they'll turn to friends, family, online communities, and professionals for, it's remarkable how quickly that gap is filled. And it clicks.

The more you know about the job ahead, the faster it clicks. Twenty-five years ago, when the first edition of
What to Expect the First Year
was introduced, it quickly became the “bible” of baby care—much as my 2,500-page pediatric textbook served as my pediatrics “bible.” And today, even with access to information about all things parenting at the fingertips of anyone with a smart-phone, I'm confident that this brand new third edition will step in to hold the hands of a new generation of new parents in a way no other resource can.

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