Sentences with phrase «separate sleeping surface»

According to their publication, infants should spend the first six months to a year in their parent's bedrooms, but on a separate sleeping surface.
If you bring your little one to bed to breastfeed, be sure to put him or her back to sleep on a separate sleeping surface before dozing off.
Do you want to give your little one the best of both worlds by allowing him or her to have a separate sleeping surface while still being within arm's reach of your bed?
Setting up your child's separate sleeping surface without moving it to another room altogether can be a great way to encourage this shift from co sleeping to independent sleeping.
I would have worried less and maybe would not have been so worried about maybe putting her on a separate sleep surface or maybe just figuring out something different that would have worked better for all involved — not when she was a newborn of course - but maybe when she was a year old.
Always put babies to sleep on their backs, on a firm, separate sleep surface.
It gets baby on a safe separate sleep surface but allows proximity for easy feeding and touch.
Co-sleeping refers to sleeping in «close proximity,» which means the child is on a separate sleep surface in the same room as the parents.
The AAP recommends the arrangement of room - sharing without bed - sharing, or having the infant sleep in the parents» room but on a separate sleep surface (crib or similar surface) close to the parents» bed.

Not exact matches

It is recommended that infants sleep in the parents» room, close to the parents» bed, but on a separate surface designed for infants, ideally for the first year of life, but at least for the first 6 months.
Room - sharing (baby on a separate, safe sleep surface in the same room as sleeping parents), however, is correlated with lower SUID / SIDS risks.
According to the Mother - Baby Sleep Laboratory at the University of Notre Dame, you can create a safe co-sleeping environment by adhering to guidelines such as putting the baby along side the adult bed on a separate surface and not taking any medication that makes you unresponsive while sleeping.
Again, I call this «separate surface cosleeping» and it works just fine and is better for families who do not breastfeed their infants, or if the mother smoked during her pregnancy, or if some other adult other than the father is in the bed, or if that adult sleep partner is indifferent to the presence of the infant, or if older children are likely to come into bed with the baby.
Aside from never letting an infant sleep outside the presence of a committed adult, i.e. separate - surface cosleeping which is safe for all infants, I do not recommend to any parents any particular type of sleeping arrangement since I do not know the circumstances within which particular parents live.
You can opt for room - sharing so you can sleep together with your baby lying on a separate surface (like a co-sleeper) within arm's reach.
In addition, bottle fed infants should not sleep in bed with the parents, although a separate surface beside the bed is probably safe, as explained by the University of Notre Dame.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that all infants sleep on their back in the same room as their mother but on a separate surface.
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics» safe sleep recommendations, babies should sleep in the same room as their parents but on a separate, flat surface on their backs for their first year of life.
In such cases, a separate safe sleeping surface might be a better choice.
I put a single bed next to my bed so baby was on a separate surface and in own baby safe bedding and I could just pop out my quite large breasts and feed while dozing off and we were sleeping on separate surfaces.
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