Baby Food Safety

As we are introducing solid foods to baby, I've struggled to figure out what is the "right" thing to do. Pediatricians aren't fully trained in baby nutrition and of course every website has a different story.

I've put this list together for my own reference, but hopefully some of my followers can also use it in the future with their babies!

Infant CPR

I am embarrassed to say that we did not take CPR training before Keira was born. We took an infant care skills class and figured we would watch a YouTube video when needed.

Now that Keira is eating solid foods I knew we needed some real training. The classes at our hospital were not convenient for us (since we would need a babysitter) so I went online to find something better and finally found this:


It is available here: http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/CPRAndECC/CommunityCPRandFirstAid/CommunityProducts/Infant-CPR-Anytime_UCM_428979_Article.jsp#mainContent
 and costs about $50.

We watched the video last night (finally) and practiced on the mini baby. It is surprising how hard you have to push on the chest. The video also shows you how to try to help baby if she is choking by dislodging the object.

I feel much more relieved knowing that if something happened we could take action immediately until professional help arrives. Remember that ANY CPR is better than no CPR.


Sleeping Arrangements

It is not a secret that I am Pro Room/Bed sharing and Anti Crying It Out. We recently moved baby's crib into our room as we plan to continue cosleeping for an indefinite amount of time. I love having Keira within arm's reach and seeing her smile first thing in the morning is amazing. 

If you are like me and every bone, muscle and nerve ending screams "go hold and comfort your baby" any time she cries, then you may appreciate these articles.

If you are on the fence or just want to learn more you may find these articles interesting food for thought.

If you disagree, that is fine too.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/denene-millner/cry-it-out_b_1163864.html

http://www.naturalchild.org/guest/tami_breazeale.html


I think room and bed sharing are great and I can't stand the thought of letting baby "cry it out". This is just my opinion, but it's always nice to know that there is scientific and anthropological evidence to back up your opinion.

Here's our setup:

{Crib: BabyMod Convertible Crib, similar HERE}


We used a series of bunjee cords to attach the crib legs to the bedframe. Keira seems to be happy here and she is safer than she was in her tiny Mini CoSleeper

Happy Co-Sleeping!


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