Janet Jendron, board president for Attachment Parenting International, said Attachment Parenting generally focuses on eight principles, but it does mean different things to different people. Jendron said parents can choose what works best for their family. “There’s not a definition that you measure up to and check off a list,” she said. “We have an opportunity to speak up and say here’s what it is and what it isn’t - mostly what it isn’t.”
Monthly Links
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July 15, 2013
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July 15, 2013
If it works, is it right? We take a look at both sides of the argument. |
July 13, 2013
Editor's PickAttachment Parenting is often thought of as an approach to parenting young children. Nurse practitioner, therapist, and coauthor of Mothering & Daughtering, Sil Reynolds, explains why it's vital to continue Attachment Parenting through the teen years. |
July 12, 2013
Experiencing "toxic stress" can put kids at a lifelong disadvantage. "I’m so stressed out," is, perhaps, the top complaint for many Americans these days. But it turns out many people are feeling stressed even before they’re old enough to complain about it. The American Academy of Pediatrics is now recommending that pediatricians screen toddlers for signs of "toxic stress" as part of routine examinations. But what does that mean, exactly, for parents, for kids, and for doctors? |
June 20, 2013
The link between a mother and child is profound, and new research suggests a physical connection even deeper than anyone thought. The profound psychological and physical bonds shared by the mother and her child begin during gestation when the mother is everything for the developing fetus, supplying warmth and sustenance, while her heartbeat provides a soothing constant rhythm. |
Feed with Love and Respect
July 14, 2013
Thanks to public-health messages, everyone pretty much knows that breastfeeding is beneficial for baby. But it’s also really good for mom, and now a new study quantifies just how good. If new moms adhered to the recommended guidelines that urge them to breastfeed each child they give birth to for at least one year, they could theoretically stave off up to 5,000 cases of breast cancer, about 54,000 cases of hypertension, and nearly 14,000 heart attacks annually. |
July 13, 2013
Many women may have an over abundance of breastmilk after their child is born. However, some may not have enough, and are in constant worry about how they are going to properly feed their child. A new study shows that support from other women to overcome their doubts regarding lactation may help provide hope and education for other mothers encountering the same difficulties. |
July 13, 2013
Maternal Sociodemographic Characteristics and the Use of the Iowa Infant Attitude Feeding Scale to Describe Breastfeeding Initiation and Duration in a Population of Urban, Latina Mothers: A Prospective Cohort Study |
July 11, 2013
"One day we asked him [Shawn Baker, a public health expert with Helen Keller International] where he would invest a billion dollars if he had it. "'To me, the next big win in saving kids’ lives is breast-feeding promotion,” he said. “It’s absolutely unacceptable that more than 800,000 kids are dying annually of suboptimal breast-feeding.' |
July 11, 2013
In the breastfeeding domain, the people who write denialist headlines know that science has a persistent habit of going against the relativistic, "whatever feels right for you is therefore right" modern mindset. Consequently such science becomes taboo in order to protect the numbers of people whose feelings may be hurt, and who might feel guilty because of the implications. But unfortunately for these people, hurt feelings and guilt do not disprove the findings. Biology is non-negotiable, and does not bend to relativism. |
July 11, 2013
The Milky Way is a film to empower mothers. The Milky Way reveals the real power vested in women's bodies and how that affects their babies - even the tiniest of preemies. This profound capacity inherent in a woman's body has been ignored, overlooked, and dismissed since the time that providing women's health care became lucrative. |
July 1, 2013
Initial choices about breastfeeding will likely influence future breastfeeding decisions, so breastfeeding interventions should specifically target new mothers. Mothers with other children also need additional encouragement to maintain breastfeeding until 6 months of age. |
June 28, 2013
Babies who are breastfed show signs of early brain development, particularly in regions associated with language, emotional function, and cognition. |
June 27, 2013
At more than 70 percent, the frequency of initiating breastfeeding in the United States is high. However, attrition rates in the first weeks and months after discharge from the newborn nursery are substantial. Why? |
June 26, 2013
Learn how hormones help to coordinate a baby's need for milk (sucking or crying) with a woman's release of milk in this Khan Academy video. |
June 24, 2013
Editor's PickBabies' milk teeth carry their early food history, and this record remains stable for tens of thousands of years. |
June 20, 2013
New evidence from research suggests that infants fed formula, rather than breastmilk, experience metabolic stress that could play a part in the long-recognized link between formula-feeding and an increased risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and other conditions in adult life. |
Use Nurturing Touch
July 13, 2013
Babies are developing flat heads due to sleeping on their backs and not being held in arms enough. |
Prepare for Pregnancy, Birth, and Parenting
July 13, 2013
By Rita Brhel |
July 13, 2013
Henci Goer takes a look at the recent study on prescribing bed rest for the prevention of preterm birth. Despite not preventing a premature baby, and even possibly increasing the likelihood, it is still routinely recommended for pregnant women. |
July 10, 2013
Childbirth Connection’s national Listening to Mothers surveys describe women’s childbearing experiences from before pregnancy through the postpartum period and their views about these matters. Two new 2013 reports describe results from initial and follow-up Listening to Mothers surveys of women who gave birth in 2011-12. The surveys were conducted by Harris Interactive and funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. |
July 1, 2013
Associations Between First-Time Expectant Women's Representations of Attachment and Their Physiological Reactivity to Infant Cry |
June 25, 2013
Learn why it’s important to mother and baby’s health to wait until at least 39 weeks of pregnancy to deliver if the mother or child’s health is not in danger. Watch the video. |
Provide Consistent and Loving Care
July 12, 2013
Once scientists learned that smoking changes the brain, making it very difficult to quit, we were able to devise treatments to help smokers change their behavior. Today we are witnessing another health revolution that is just as far-reaching. It concerns the effects of mistreatment on the brains of young children. It will force us to rethink the way we deliver services - health care, education, and more - to our most vulnerable. |
July 10, 2013
Perhaps you've seen the video recently posted describing Fred Rogers as an "evil" man who "ruined a generation of children" because his message to young children - that they are special just for being who they are - leads to narcissism and attitudes of entitlement. If kids believe they are special, a commentator asks, why should they work hard and try to do better? |
June 30, 2013
Editor's PickAs Father's Day draws near, one psychologist says dads should ask their children for a little more feedback than they might get with the yearly greeting card. |
Strive for Balance in Personal and Family Life
July 10, 2013
Fights between siblings – from toy-snatching to clandestine whacks to being banished from the bedroom – are so common they’re often dismissed as simply part of growing up. Yet a new study from researchers at the University of New Hampshire finds that sibling aggression is associated with significantly worse mental health in children and adolescents. In some cases, effects of sibling aggression on mental health were the same as those of peer aggression. |
July 1, 2013
Americans are passionate about equality and justice, and we should apply those principles to family policy discussions. We need to transform the prevailing frame - the focus on “working families” - to one that embraces all families with inclusive family policies. |
Respond with Sensitivity
June 20, 2013
This month's special issue of Clinical Lactation (Volume 4, Issue 2) is a great resource for crying-it-out and sleep-training issues. It includes articles on the harms of sleep training, ways to calm a crying baby, why CIO is bad for babies, and how to bring parents back into the decision making. |
June 15, 2013
"Empathy," writes Paul Bloom in The New Yorker, "is parochial, narrow-minded, and innumerate. We're often at our best when we're smart enough not to rely on it." We'd be better off were we to supplant our flawed empathetic sensibilities with reason (that most flawless of human capacities). . . . |
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