It is possible to find a balance between drinking safely and responsibly without having
ill effects on your baby's health or your milk supply.
But what happened during the labor, birth and immediate postpartum period can have a
significant effect on the baby's readiness and ability to breastfeed.
In this rare situation where the mom's body naturally becomes the priority, it can have dangerous
effects on a baby who is only receiving nutrients from breast milk.
Not only do hiccups have very
little effect on a baby's breathing, but many babies can sleep peacefully right through them.
If a cold medication is taken one time, it will also have
less effect on baby or mom's milk supply.
Traveling can have a
funny effect on baby's regular bodily functions and in this instance, the «just in case» mentality is warranted.
In fact, there is some evidence that early introduction of common allergens, such as peanut products, may actually have a
protective effect on babies.
Wendy Jones gives mothers and those treating them the information they need to make decisions about medication, while allaying fears that many have about adverse
effects on babies of drugs passing through breastmilk as well as explaining the cautions on patient information leaflets in all medication boxes.
While co-sleeping history had no
apparent effect on the babies» responses to a painful vaccination, it was linked with less cortisol reactivity during bath time (Tollenaar et al 2012).
Research from random breast milk screenings rather than controlled studies (for ethical reasons) shows concern regarding marijuana's
possible effects on a baby's nervous system development, and endocannabinoid - related functions such as anxiety regulation and emotional learning.
Obviously, crying a specific period of time of «cry it out» method has an
inevitable effect on the baby's sleeping cycle so that your baby can adjust to falling asleep on his own.
Though I'm not sure on the thought process of it being a
placebo effect on the baby as that was not explained at all I thoroughly 100 % agree on the choking and strangulation hazard.
Familiar odors have a soothing and
relaxing effect on babies, which makes sense since they first identify their mothers by smell.