New Trends and Baby Products for 2012

It isn’t my mother’s nursery, that’s for certain! The modern gadgets and trends of 2012 for welcoming Baby home from the hospital probably seem quite foreign to many grandparents. Some are valuable tools for parents of newborns, while others are additions to the long list of non-necessities that are just fun to try.

Bedding
Gone are the days of frilly bumper pads and thick matching quilts. The new baby bedding trends are about safety. Bumper pads are no longer recommended as they can pose strangulation and entrapment dangers for babies, and the American Academy of Pediatrics warns parents not to place blankets or stuffed animals in the cribs as well. All of the new moms who dreamed of beautiful crib ensembles don’t have to settle for just plan sheets, however. On the list of fun to try pieces are new fitted sheets like these that have added designs on the sides to mimic a lower look of a bumper pad, but it can also alert you to whether or not the sheet is fitted properly.

Bottles
Gone are the old days of glass bottles that wouldn’t survive a day at baby gym glass. If you are considering bottle-feeding, even part of the time, you also may have heard about the risks of using plastic bottles. There are many studies that question the safety of BPA (Bisphenol A), a compound found in many plastics, including baby bottles. There are current debates about the health and safety of infants exposed to this chemical through bottles.

The new look for babies and parents are stainless steel baby bottles. The push for these is across several levels, including the “green” choice of the product that can be recycled, the durability of the material, and the freedom from BPA found in plastics. Stainless steel bottles and sippy cups can also be easier to clean and safer in the long-run because their scratch-resistant surfaces don’t allow for areas in which bacteria can grow.

Induced Lactation
Adoptions and surrogate parents bring joy to parents and help create new families, but often did not offer the possibilities of non-birth parents breastfeeding. Now some pediatricians offer cocktails of hormones and supplements that are designed to mimic the hormones of pregnancy. Also known as adoptive breast-feeding, the general idea is derived from the wet nurses of centuries gone by. Not all parents are opting for the prescription pad when it comes to this feeding option, as some lactation consultants recommend herbal teas and round the clock breast pumping to stimulate breast-milk production. This, however, is usually not as successful in producing the quantity of milk necessary to sustain feeding a healthy newborn, but it does provide parents with the ability to form this close bond as well as pass along helpful antibodies.

High Tech Baby Monitors
There is an app for everything! My first baby monitor could double as low-budget eavesdropping technology as it picked up conversations of other moms and kids in the neighborhood. Now parents can plug in their iPads and phones and use them as baby monitors at a moment’s notice. Not all apps have video, but as long as you can hear your little one snoozing or screaming, it probably doesn’t matter in the long run. This means one less thing to pack for the trip to Grandma’s, too.

The Extras

  • Apps for keeping tabs on the ins and outs – the milk and the poo – so you will never have to ask yourself again, “When was the last time he…?”
  • Ear scopes that parents can safely use to check for the source of that screaming pain, such as this one, can provide back-up in the middle of the night when you just aren’t sure. After watching one son suffer through tremendous ear problems, I know that gadgets like these can help get to the source quickly (but always check with your doctor with questions!).
  • Attachments for your strollers just for your phone so your beverage holder doesn’t get lonely!

At the end of the day, so many of the gadgets and gizmos we surround our babies with don’t give what they really need most – our time and attention. There is no app for the nurturing bonds we can provide as we snuggle with our babes, listen to their heartbeats in person, and pay attention to the subtle signals they give us for their needs. If they ever make apps to replace those moments, I don’t want one anyway!

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