Posts Tagged ‘kids’

Breastfeeding for emergency preparedness

Breastfeeding for emergency preparedness focus of WHO

This week is world breastfeeding week. According to the WHO, breastfeeding could save millions of lives, especially in the event of a public emergency. Breastfeeding is not a lifestyle – it is a way to reduce healthcare spending, promote women’s health, and ensure a lifetime of better health for breastfed infants and children. This year, breastfeeding as a part of emergency preparedness is a focus of the World Health Organization.

World breastfeeding is an annual campaign that takes place August 1 to August 7, designed to educate, promote, and encourage breastfeeding throughout the world. This year’s focus is on emergency preparedness and the importance of breastfeeding. Mother’s milk is more plentiful than bottled formula and water and could sustain vulnerable infants and children in the event of a local or national emergency.

Mothers who breastfeed provide a lifetime of health benefits that continues to adulthood through enhanced immunity, less risk of allergy, love, and early bonding. Optimal nutrition comes from mother’s milk. Read more

Tips for At Home Parents

Tips for At Home ParentsHaving a baby can turn the most social parent into something of a homebody. (Hey, it can be a lot of work to get that little baby out the door!) And while you really should do your best to get up and at ‘em when you can, sometimes you really do end up stuck in the house. But that doesn’t mean you can’t make the most of it!

We’ve got some tips for making your time at home beneficial, productive… and fun:

If you haven’t yet, join our online community of awesome parents. Get tips from celebrity moms and dads, find expert advice on everything from diaper rash to baby sleep issues, check out cool baby products and laugh your butt off as other new parents regale you with the trials and tribulations of parenthood!

Forget window-shopping, it’s all about online shopping when you’re a new parent. You can get great deals on diapers, books, toys—anything you ever dreamed of (and a ton of junk you never did!). Just don’t spend your kid’s college fund on Amazon!

If your feeling cooped up and baby is a little fussy, entertain him with some fun stay-at-home activities. Try educational singing games, tummy time games, gentle newborn neck stretches and baby massage.

Now if only someone would baby you and give you a little rubdown!

Parenting a Negative Child

Here are some things you will want to know if you have a negative child:

When it’s a good thing:You’re likely to be very tuned in to the needs of a child who displays a consistently negative attitude. Given how much complaining a child like this tends to do, what choice do you have but to hear her grievances?

Parenting a Negative ChildWhen it’s not such a good thing: A consistently negative kid can be a major challenge for any parent. No matter how much you do to try to make her happy, you may not be able to turn her negative attitude around. You also may find that this particular child demands more than her fair share of the attention in your family—something that can cause conflict within the family.

Bringing out the best in your child: Accept the fact that your child’s mood may be hardwired and you may not be able to alter this aspect of her temperament, no matter how hard you try. That doesn’t mean you should abandon all efforts to try to encourage her to see the sunnier side of life; it simply means that you should stop blaming yourself or your melancholy baby for her down-in-the-dumps moods.

Avoiding Parental Guilt

Avoiding Parental GuiltDespite our best intentions, most of us find it’s pretty hard to measure up to the standards that we set for ourselves on the discipline front. The result? Truckloads and truckloads of mother (or father) guilt. Here’s how to cope with parenthood’s most abundant yet useless emotion:

Accept the fact that you’re a less-than-perfect parent. Where is it written in the parenting job description that perfection is required? Cut yourself a little slack and don’t demand anything more of yourself than you ask of your own kids; in other words, progress, not perfection.

Don’t be afraid to apologize to your child if an apology is warranted. It won’t undercut your authority as a parent if you own up to the fact that you were wrong; in fact, it is likely to enhance your credibility. Your child will have a lot more respect for you if you admit that you blew it than if you try to make excuses for your own bad behavior. You’ll also feel a lot better yourself. Read more

The Challenges of Parenting a Toddler

The Challenges of Parenting a ToddlerParenting a toddler is not for the weak of heart—to say nothing of the weak of stomach! But fear not, it’s not just your toddler who’s acting this way! Most toddlers possess these wonderful (and challenging) qualities:

Toddlers are fiercely independent. If toddlers had their own theme song, it would have to be Frank Sinatra’s “My Way.” Whether they’re prepared to admit it or not, they still need a lot of help from you. Unfortunately, that help may not always be welcome.

Toddlers are easily frustrated. At the root of this frustration is the fact that their abilities can’t keep pace with their ambition: Your toddler is determined to make a tower with his blocks and becomes enraged when he lacks the manual dexterity to do so. The upside to this drive to achieve is the fact that toddlers are extraordinarily persistent. One day soon your toddler will amaze you with his tower-building abilities. Read more

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