Safety Tips for Newborns
As a parent, you always want to keep your child safe. Read through this list of common safety tips to keep in mind when caring for your newborn. Please remember that this is not an exhaustive list and you should consult with your doctor about any safety concerns to do with your newborn. Feel free to give us a call at (859)-277-6516 with any questions.
Here is a quick list of 16 safety tips for newborns:
Never leave a baby of any age on an unguarded elevated surface, such as a counter or changing table. When the baby is on the elevated surface, the parent should face the baby and form a barrier with their body. The parent should keep a hand on the baby if looking away, to stop any movement before the baby can fall.- Do not leave a baby unsupervised in the middle of any bed.
- Infants in a seat or carrier, even if buckled in, should be placed on the floor if left. Babies can tip over an infant seat or carrier.
- Do not put a baby, even if in an infant carrier, on the high shallow child seat of a grocery cart. The baby should instead be placed in the deeper and more protected section of the cart.
- Babies should sleep in their own beds or bassinets, and never with another person. Babies sharing a bed may be suffocated or roll out of the bed.
- Keep stuffed animals, pillows and bumper pads out of a baby's bed.
- The baby’s mattress should fit its bed tightly, without big gaps along the sides.
- Do not use safety pins around a baby. If their use is necessary, close them immediately upon removal from clothing.
- Do not allow any type of plastic bag around a baby.
- Keep long hair tied back when holding the baby to prevent hair strands from becoming twisted around fingers or toes.
- All children should be kept in an approved car seat of an appropriate size for the child. The child’s car seat should have wide straps over the chest and shoulders, as well as the lower part of the body. Be sure that the car seat is properly installed, preferably in the second row, directly behind the driver. A child should ride facing the rear for the first two years of life, and should never be allowed in the passenger seat under the age of 12.
- Install and routinely check smoke and carbon monoxide detectors.
- All household cleaners, medicines, poisons and plants should be kept far out of a child's reach. It is truly amazing how far a child will go to get a forbidden object. For easy access, the poison control center’s phone number should be listed on the fridge and in parents’ cell phones.
- Limit visitors over the first few weeks of an infant's life. Mothers need rest, and mothers and babies need uninterrupted time to establish their breastfeeding pattern. When visitors do arrive, the baby should be kept in a separate room, with only one or two visitors allowed to see the baby at a time. All visitors must be healthy. Visitors can visit with older children before visiting the new baby, which will allow parents control, prevent overstimulation for the baby, and offer older children some attention. Visitors will often bring a gift for the new baby but nothing for older siblings; parents may want to keep small gifts available to give to older children when visitors leave the house.
- A baby's room temperature should be kept between 68-72°. Plenty of sunshine and fresh air are healthy for mother and baby. Try not to overdress the baby; a general rule of thumb is that a baby should be dressed in one layer more than its parents are wearing. If it is very hot outside, a baby only needs a diaper and undershirt. For sleeping, parents may consider using a sleep sack or a sleeper instead of a blanket.
- Cribs: To safety-proof a crib, the slats must be less than 2 3/8 inches apart, the sides must be at least 26 inches above the mattress, and there should not be anything in the crib to help the baby climb out and over the top. No strings or cords should be dangling, and the mattress should be firm and tight-fitting. No plastic sheeting or pillows should be put in the crib. When a child reaches two years of age, a pillow may be placed under the fitted sheet for head elevation.