Not exact matches
If your
baby pees and poops alot, you may need to change them
very frequently.
During the first couple of days outside the womb, a
baby will start out with drinking only
very small amounts of breast milk or formula and hence will have no need to
pee very much either.
Since those doing infant potty training are
very in - tune with their
baby's
pee and poo patterns (moreso than a person using diapers full - time), ECers typically realize there's constipation much earlier than others.
If you don't clean it, those oils will stay and when
baby pee's on it, the urine will slide off instead of sinking it, which will cause leaking, which will make you
very unhappy.
The time between feedings lengthens but
baby's tummy is
very small when born and they
pee and poop so they need to refill as well!
If
baby is in another room, unless he is
very vocal about his need to eliminate, you will rely more on generic timing and can offer «dream
pees» (you can also use a
baby monitor to listen in).
Yes, there can be medical issues like a UTI or diaper rash, but in
very young healthy
babies, they are most likely just telling you they need to
pee — the only way they know how.
Since newborns only make a small amount of urine and disposable diapers are
very absorbent, it can be hard to tell if the diapers are wet and your
baby is
peeing enough.
«Cluster feeding is
very normal and by itself isn't a reason to worry about your milk supply or that
baby isn't getting enough — as long as
baby is pooping and
peeing often and is gaining weight well,» O'Brien says.
They do keep the old
pee away from skin and can be
very helpful for a
baby who sleeps though the night without a change.
You might be house training a
baby kitten or puppy, getting an outdoor cat used to being and going potty indoors, or perhaps you have an elderly
very - housebroken pet who won't use
pee pads and isn't making it quickly enough to the outside.