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Bed-sharing means sleeping in the same bed as your baby, or sharing the same sleeping surface. Co-sleeping means sleeping in close proximity to your baby, sometimes in the same bed and sometimes nearby in the same room (room-sharing).
7 lut 2020 · McKenna’s easy-to-read book offers important insights about how cosleeping can be made safe and what kind of benefits it might promote for children’s development and parents’ well-being.
9 lip 2024 · Co-sleeping: Balancing Pros, Cons, and Safe Practises. With Red Nose Day's focus on safe sleep for infants, learn the potential benefits and risks of co-sleeping.
28 lip 2023 · Remember that the safest co-sleeping arrangement is between a sober and smoke-free breastfeeding mother and her infant, in a firm bed, without loose bedding. Any departure from that increases the risks of sudden infant death, says Kam.
15 sie 2024 · The Department of Health’s advice on co-sleeping is clear: it's important to be safe if you share a bed with your baby. Most parents don’t start out intending to co-sleep but surveys indicate that, when getting their baby to sleep becomes tricky, around 50% try co-sleeping in the first six months.
Some parents choose to share a bed or other sleep surface (also known as co-sleeping) with their babies. Read our advice on how to co-sleep more safely. To reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) the safest place for a baby to sleep is in their own clear, flat, separate sleep space , such as a cot or Moses basket.
Infants should never sleep on couches or sofas with or without adults as they can slip down (face first) into the crevice or get wedged against the back of a couch where they may suffocate. Bedsharing: It is important to be aware that adult beds were not designed to assure infants safety!