Do not let people who are
smoking around your baby.
Avoid
smoking around your baby.
Also, avoid
smoking around the baby; studies have found that secondhand smoke significantly increases the SIDS risk.»
Your baby will be exposed to secondhand smoke if you smoke while you are with the baby, and even if you don't
smoke around the baby, they can still be harmed by thirdhand smoke.
Be sure not to
smoke around the baby.
Allow anyone to
smoke around your baby or to take your baby into a room or a car where someone has recently been smoking.
But basically, breastfeed, don't
smoke around the baby, have the babies sleep on their back, don't overheat the baby.
Never
smoke around your baby or inside your home or car (or any indoor area where your baby may be).
Smoking has been linked to the increase risk for SIDS, and not just when
you smoke around your baby.
Don't let anyone
smoke around your baby.
Smoking around your baby or in the home weakens» babies lungs and causes an increased risk of SIDS.
It's not even good to allow people who
smoke around the baby — the chemicals from tobacco smoke linger in hair, clothes, cars, you name it.
it is not rudeness to say these things because it is more rude to
smoke around your baby or other people's babies!
Do not allow anyone to
smoke around your baby.
Not exact matches
Smoking marijuana
around a
baby exposes her to dangerous substances through second - hand
smoke, which can often contain additional harmful ingredients since street drugs are rarely pure.
API Links you to... News on pregnancy (reduce your risk of C - section), infancy (make your
baby smarter through touch), childhood (keep your child from becoming a bully), adolescence (keep your child from
smoking), all the way through the teen years into adulthood (expect to have your children
around for a long time).
Parents whose children are injured because they weren't in a proper car seat, didn't bolt a TV or furniture to the wall, co-slept or put their
baby in an unsafe sleep environment,
smoke constantly
around their asthmatic child, leave medications or drugs out, think that the dog licking their child's face is «cute», refuse to vaccinate, etc etc etc..
Keep the air
around your
baby at home, in the car, and in all other environments free of
smoke.
Studies show that a
baby's risk of SIDS rises with each additional smoker in the household, with the number of cigarettes
smoked around her each day, and with the length of her exposure to cigarette
smoke.
In the case of your
baby's health, make sure that those
around your little one are
smoke - free, or not
smoking around him or her.
But fortunately the primary factors that increase risk are now widely known i.e. placing an infant prone (face down) for sleep, using soft mattresses, maternal
smoking, overwrapping
babies or blocking air movement
around their faces.
The risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) becomes greater when a mother
smokes or when the
baby is
around second - hand (or passive)
smoke.
I did manage to quit
smoking completely early on in my pregnancy, but after my
baby was born I felt stressed and would occasionally have a cigarette in the backyard, when there was someone else
around to watch the
baby.
Demand somebody (your spouse or significant other comes to mind) stay home with the
baby once in a while so you can get a massage, go to the salon for a cut and color, get your nails did, or drive
around the neighborhood for a half hour
smoking an unlit cigarette and blaring terrible 90s boy band tunes.
If you want to insist people wash their hands before picking up your
baby or that they not
smoke around your children, say so.
Smoking (whether during pregnancy or
around the
baby after birth) increases the risk of SIDS.
Do not drink alcohol,
smoke, or use drugs before, during, or
around your
baby, including when you're feeding them regardless of how you feed.
Facilities include WiFi (internet), office facilities, in - house bar, laundry,
baby sitting and a full braai entertainment area
around the swimming pool, off road secure parking, designated
smoking areas.
The programme also provides Health Workers or clinicians with opportunities to engage with mothers, their partners and families about issues affecting their growing
baby — such as healthy choices
around smoking, alcohol and diet.