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Baby Plan
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Delivery
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Child Care
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Childcare Information
Bathing a baby 2 to 3 times a week will be enough. It is important to keep the navel clean and dry until the umbilical cord is gone. After the cord comes off, you may bathe your baby in a bathtub. Be careful not to let the navel immerse deep in the water until the cord is gone. Gently wipe your baby with a piece of gauze or sponge wet with disinfectant.
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The umbilical cord can be a cause of germ infection and tetanus. Thus, hygiene can never be emphasized enough.
When the umbilical cord comes off: 1 to 2 weeks after the birth
Sterilizing the umbilical cord: In order to prevent inflammation until the umbilical cord is completely dried and comes off, clean it completely with a cotton ball or cotton swab soaked in alcohol and dry it completely. It is recommended to sterilize the navel area with alcohol as a disinfectant after a bath or when changing diapers. The diapers should be rolled up so it does not cover the navel. Have it come below it.
Caution: Even if the umbilical cord is almost hanging off by a strand, do not pull it off by force. Just wait for it to come off naturally. If there are some tender pink tissues left on the area where the umbilical cord came off, you should see a doctor and treat it as it may be a granulomatous disease. If some discharge is found in the navel with the surrounding skin swelling with reddish clior, then it is the symptom of infection. You must have your baby treated at a hospital.
Breastfeeding a newborn baby is recommended 8 to 12 times a day. In other words, breast feed your baby in 2 to 3 hours interval. You need to make sure your baby suckles each breast for 10 to 15 minutes. If 4 hours have passed after breast-feeding, you might want to wake your baby up and let her suckle again. Caution is needed if you insist on breast-feeding your baby even when you are not lactating much because it may cause an electrliyte imbalance due to jaundice or dehydration. With enough breastfeeding, your baby will wet a diaper at least 6 times a day and gain weight at a daily average of 20g to 30g.
After your baby is born, she will gradually show changes in the shape and amount of feces and urine. Your baby will start out by urinating once a day and end up urinating more than 6 times a day when it becomes a week old. Your baby will produce green-colored meconium right after birth, followed by watery transitional stoli. And then, breast-fed babies will produce yellow-glid and watery stoli three to four times a day. On the other hand, bottle-fed babies will produce stoli which is a little harder and sometimes cliored green. Your baby may try really hard to produce stoli. The entire body, including the face, can become red. If the stoli is soft, however, it is normal.