When You Start Active Moving, Know Tips So That Your Baby Doesn't Fall Out Of Bed

YOGYAKARTA When babies start to actively move and want to know a lot about the objects around them, parents need to facilitate but also keep them from falling. Because according to research, as many as 75 percent of babies fall from furniture due to rolling from the bed and falling from the dressing table.

Apparently, this baby accidentally fell because the parents turned their heads to overcome other homework. The little one may choose to move or reach out to pick up something nearby. Well, launching Psychology Today, Sunday, October 23, author of Doing Developmental Research, Maithri Sivaraman, Ph.D. suggests keeping objects that catch your little one's attention when you leave them for a moment to move around.

You also need to remember installing a safety line in order to keep babies from falling from a table or mattress. To not restrict them from exploring their circuits, give them control in a safe environment. You need to let them within safe limits according to their abilities. That is, free them when they spill water or spend a long time playing brushes.

Maybe letting them learn about the surroundings makes you frustrated because you have to clean up afterwards. But according to research, autonomy in infants supports health, psychological well-being, and predicts the cognitive function of the executive in pre-school in the future.

In carrying out the role of parents, fathers and mothers need to collaborate with each other. Because a small part of the falls are associated with breastfeeding activities. When the mother is tired and lacks sleep, breastfeeding needs to be accompanied by her partner.

In research in Italy, the fathers of newborns are trained in various ways to support their partners in managing breastfeeding. In all cases, teaching the father to manage and support his partner means that the baby is fully breastfed at the age of 6 months. Thus, partner support can be very helpful not only to keep the baby safe but also to the success of breastfeeding as a whole.