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10 paź 2024 · Cosleeping with a baby in your bed is dangerous for the baby. Babies can and have suffocated on pillows, blankets, the mattress, and even their parents’ chests. You were right to have been paranoid because it isn’t safe.
I sleep on the floor with my newborn since he was 4 weeks old, he is now 7 weeks. It is safe because the floor is hard and adult mattresses are to soft for infants. And he can’t fall off the floor like on a mattress. I never got any sleep until the day we started co-sleeping. Reply reply.
It worked great for pregnancy, and I used it for the first month or so of co-sleeping with baby. It had a detachable leg pillow, so sometimes I would just use that on my back. I liked all the options of ways to use it, and you could position everything so it wasn't dangerous for baby.
Instead, the baby needs to use its sense of touch through skin-to-skin contact, and its sense of smell. According to Professor James McKenna, director of the mother baby sleep laboratory at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, co-sleeping is a safe and even potentially life saving option, as long as parents provide a safe sleeping environment ...
Co-sleeping is fine if the baby is in a crib or bassinet, not in the bed. A lot of families co-sleep in my state because it’s easier but they’re not educated on the safe way to do it.
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.
The safe way to co-sleep with your baby is to room-share — where your baby sleeps in your bedroom, in her own crib, bassinet or playard. In fact, the AAP recommends room-sharing with your baby (with separate sleeping surfaces) until she's at least 6 months old because it's protective against SIDS.