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Most babies have predictable behavior. Parents who have a head start with some advance knowledge of what to expect in their baby's first few days of life will have more confidence when they meet their baby. Babies and mothers change remarkably from day one, to day two, to day three. The goal of the lactation consultant who has written Translating the Language of the Newborn is to instill common sense care into the first three days of a baby's life outside the womb. Parents' questions on formula feeding, breastfeeding, lactation, latching on, burping, hunger signals, crying, sleep patterns, and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Most babies have predictable behavior. Parents who have a head start with some advance knowledge of what to expect in their baby's first few days of life will have more confidence when they meet their baby. Babies and mothers change remarkably from day one, to day two, to day three. The goal of the lactation consultant who has written Translating the Language of the Newborn is to instill common sense care into the first three days of a baby's life outside the womb. Parents' questions on formula feeding, breastfeeding, lactation, latching on, burping, hunger signals, crying, sleep patterns, and more are answered from the newborn's perspective and in the voice of the baby. This little book is very short, easy to read, and is an excellent reference for any new mommy or daddy.
Autorenporträt
Nancy T. McGinty is a Registered Nurse specializing in neonatal nursing with thirty years in the field. She earned a BA in Psychology from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Her career as a registered nurse began at a large children's hospital in Atlanta, Georgia where she worked on several medical/surgical units for six years. For the next twenty-four years, she worked in the well baby and neonatal intensive care nurseries of another large hospital in Atlanta and continues to serve as an IBCLC Lactation Consultant in that same hospital for twelve of those years. She is the mother of three and grandmother of six and lives with her husband in the Southern Appalachian Mountains.