Not exact matches
If you go by daycare diapering standards, diapers should be
changed every 2
hours (or immediately after a # 2)
during waking hours.
For newborns who had any spitting up in the first 24
hours after birth, the following information was added: time of the event, the newborn's position
during the event,
wake or sleep state, estimated amount of regurgitation, color
changes (duskiness, redness, or cyanosis) and intervention (if any) required (ie, stimulation, «blow - by» oxygen, suction)(Table 1).
In fact,
during the first few weeks of life, a newborn will spend the majority of her days and nights sleeping (though it may not seem like she's sleeping very much at night),
waking every few
hours to eat or to have a diaper
change.
My daughter is 14 mo and still nurses
during the day but sleeps through the night - a big
change from when we co-slept just because she
woke up every half
hour to nurse!
I always claim that the cold doesn't bother me (call me Elsa) because it's winter, and there's nothing we can do to
change the seasons, so we might just as well embrace it and try to make the best of it, but this year in particular I've had to
wake up at 6 AM in order to arrive on time to my 7 AM class and let me tell you that the weather
during the first
hours of the day is extreme.
These school schedules also do not match up with the established science that suggests that teenagers often stay up late due to hormonal
changes — such as melatonin increases that occur in the brain
during one's teenage years — and so while teenagers need nine
hours of sleep per night, they typically get only around seven
hours and have a harder time
waking up.