Pryor, Karen DO N'T SHOOT THE DOG Bantam, rev. ed., 1999 Karen Pryor,
author of Nursing Your Baby, applies the principles of positive reinforcement to humans, as well as dogs, cats, and dolphins.
, Pryor is
the author of Nursing Your Baby, as well as several other books and many sci - entific papers and articles on learning and behavior.
Not exact matches
-- Carole Kramer Arsenault, RN, IBCLC, and
author of The
Baby Nurse Bible: Secrets Only a
Baby Nurse Can Tell You about Having and Caring for Your
Baby
The best - known advocates
of parent - led scheduling —
author Gary Ezzo and British maternity
nurse - turned - childcare expert Gina Ford — say their advice is a middle ground between the strict four - hour feeding schedules
of yesteryear and the on - demand feeding and
baby - led schedules
of today.
Kathleen Huggins, R.N., M.S., IBCLC, is the
author of The
Nursing Mother's Companion; The Expectant Parents» Companion: Simplifying What to Do, Buy, or Borrow for an Easy Life With
Baby; and New Lives:
Nurses» Stories About Caring for
Babies.
While pumping after any feed can help build your refrigerator supply, the most productive one is after your first a.m.
nursing session, says pediatrician Tanya Altmann, M.D.,
author of What to Feed Your
Baby.
Tracy Hogg,
nurse and
author of Secrets
of the
Baby Whisperer «What a good many people don't realize is that
babies need parents» direction to establish proper sleep habits.
Throughout time and all over the world, mothers have been adopting the same position to keep their
babies safe when they sleep.1 One
of the reasons that bedsharing is safer when you're breastfeeding is the way a
nursing mother instinctively positions her body next to her
baby's, in what the La Leche League International
authors of Sweet Sleep: Nighttime and Naptime strategies for the Breastfeeding Family call a «cuddle curl.»