Название: The New Father
Автор: Armin A. Brott
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Секс и семейная психология
Серия: New Father Series
isbn: 9780789260581
isbn:
At the same time, although they’re all natural, they still have a carbon footprint. Cloth diapers are made of cotton, which is taxing on farmland. And in order to sterilize cloth diapers properly, diaper services wash them seven times in near-boiling water, consuming huge amounts of power, water, and detergents. The diapers are then delivered all over town in trucks that fill the air with toxic pollutants. The pro-disposable lobby says that using diaper services consumes more fuel and causes as much air pollution as disposable diapers do. Seems like a bit of a stretch to me.
If you’re thinking about going cloth, use a diaper service. Over the long term, it may be more expensive than buying your own diapers and washing them yourself, but most new parents I’ve spoken with would rather spend their free time napping or hanging out together than doing laundry. Costs vary greatly around the country. If you sign up with a diaper service, you’ll start with about eighty diapers per week. If you’re buying your own, start with around forty.
Even if you decide against using cloth diapers for the baby, buy a dozen anyway—they’re great for drying baby bottoms on changing tables and for draping over your shoulder to protect your clothes when your baby spits up.
• Other Options. Overall it’s a tough choice, and it’s all yours. But I suggest that you do a combination of the two: use cloth diapers during the day and when you’re at home, disposables at night and whenever you go out. Alternatively, if you’re not worried about spending a little extra money, there are a few eco-friendly options out there, including those that use cotton, cornstarch, and/or wood pulp to absorb liquid instead of gels, and some that are compostable or flushable (or have disposable inserts that are). All are widely available online or in brick-and-mortar stores.
What’s Really Going On Inside Those Diapers?
• Meconium. That’s the word for those greenish black, sticky, tarry bowel movements that may have you worrying that there’s something wrong with your baby’s intestines. By about the fourth day of age, as your baby starts breast- or bottle-feeding, the meconium will be replaced with a much more pleasant-looking concoction. Breastfed babies usually fill their diapers with seedy, Dijon mustard–colored stool that doesn’t smell all that bad. Formula-fed babies produce a more pasty substance that can smell like milk gone sour. Occasional changes in color and consistency are normal for both.
• Early puberty? It’s not uncommon for boys’ and girls’ genitals and nipples to be swollen for the first few days after birth. There may even be a few drops of milk. Girls sometimes also have a whitish discharge and even some tiny streaks of blood from the vagina. Again, nothing to worry about. This has to do with the high levels of hormones the baby got from your partner, and all these symptoms will clear up within a week or two after delivery.
• The umbilical cord stump. Your baby’s umbilical cord stump will drop off anywhere from one to three weeks after she’s born. Folding down the front of the diaper exposes the stump to more air and speeds up the falling-off process. Until then, limit your baby-washing efforts to sponge baths. Other than keeping the stump clean and dry, there’s no need to do anything special to take care of it. You can clean any drainage on or around the cord by gently wiping it off with a cotton swab or wet washcloth. When it does fall off, a small amount of bleeding is normal.
Dads in the NICU
If your baby was born before about 32 weeks and had a very low birth weight, or if you had multiples, she (or they) will have to spend some time in the neo-natal (or newborn) intensive care unit (NICU, pronounced “Nick-U”). In the case of healthy-but-small babies, there’s not a lot to worry about—they’re called “growers and feeders” and just have to bulk up to four or five pounds before you can take them home. But not all babies in the NICU are healthy.
Watching your child struggle to hold on to life can be a frightening and humbling experience. (Even looking at a preemie can be scary. Depending on how premature the baby is, the eyes may still be fused shut, the skin may be translucent and reddish, and she may look more like a fetus than a baby. Over time, though, she’ll gradually look more and more “normal.”) A lot of dads I talked to told me that the feeling of helplessness was overwhelming. Not only were they powerless to help their child, but they often felt left out or ignored by the medical staff, who focused almost exclusively on the mother. For that reason, most new dads who have children in the NICU are generally left to come up with coping strategies on their own. Here are some that worked for many of the dads in my research:
• Try not to take it personally. The truth is that although it might feel like you’re being left out, the staff’s primary concern is to save your baby’s life—and it should be yours too. And if the staff is focusing on your partner more than on you, that’s because it’s important that the baby eat, and her mother’s milk is the best medicine.
• Don’t be afraid to ask questions. You have a right to know exactly what’s going on with your child every step of the way. A lot of men find that understanding the procedures, the reasons, the odds of success, what’s normal, and what’s not—is incredibly helpful, not only with coping with the situation, but also with bonding with their baby.
• Ask about kangaroo care. In Colombia, the mortality rate for premature infants was as high as 70 percent as recently as the 1980s. But a few doctors decided to try something different: they placed the tiny babies, wearing only a cap and a diaper, on a parent’s bare chest, skin to skin, for several hours a day. The results were amazing. To start with, the mortality rate dropped to 30 percent. In studies in the United States and other countries, human kangaroo babies slept better, were taken off respirators sooner, cried less and were alert more, were better able to regulate their body temperature, gained more weight, and came home earlier. There were benefits for the parents as well: dads and moms who held their babies like this felt more confident in their parenting abilities and better able to do something productive for their babies. And breastfeeding moms who did kangaroo care were able to produce more milk. Unfortunately, not all hospitals allow kangaroo care (sometimes also called skin-to-skin care). If yours doesn’t, ask the nursing staff whether you and your partner can do it anyway. If they need any convincing, show them this section.
• Be a little bit selfish. Sounds horrible, but it’s not as bad as you think. The point is that you’re not going to be much use to anyone—baby or partner—if you’re walking around like a zombie because you haven’t slept in forty-eight hours. You’re in a really tough spot. Mom and baby need you to be there and to be strong for them. Plus, you’ve got your own stress, worry, and fears to deal with. So if you need to find a couch and take a nap, do it. And if you need to go for a run or play basketball or do something else to blow off steam, do it. Your whole family will be better off in the long run.
• Be emotionally strong too. You and your partner may have very different ways of coping with your baby’s illness. A lot of men, for example, are fascinated by the technology and find that focusing on that helps them cope. Others only feel safe expressing anger. Women, though, tend to just go straight to the emotions—particularly sadness and sorrow. Some women get upset at what they interpret as their partner’s “insensitivity” (which generally means that they aren’t expressing their emotions in a very feminine way). If this happens, talk to her about what you’re feeling. She needs to know you care.
• Connect with other parents. Many hospitals have moved from open ward NICUs, where several babies share one large room, to putting the babies in private or semi-private rooms. The idea is to give parents more privacy and to give the babies a quieter СКАЧАТЬ