Archive for December, 2008

Baby Gift Sets For Any Occasion

If you've been invited to a baby shower, or a baby's first birthday party, or maybe even a baptism, you know you should bring something. What do you get a baby that's so young? (…)

The ‘poop’ on diaper pails

In the market for a diaper pail? Here’s the lowdown on this necessary nursery product to help you pick the right one and make diaper duty easier. Don’t be swayed by capacity. Diaper-pail makers claim pails hold between 24 and…

First Patient Enrolled In Open-Label, Switchover Trial Of PrGCD For The Treatment Of Gaucher Disease

Protalix BioTherapeutics, Inc. (Amex: PLX), announced today enrollment of the first patient in a worldwide, multi-center, open-label, switchover trial to assess the safety and efficacy of prGCD. prGCD is the Company’s proprietary plant cell expressed recombinant form of human glucocerebrosidase (GCD) that is in development for the treatment of Gaucher disease, a rare and serious lysosomal storage disorder in humans.

Child’s ADHD Diagnosis Is Tied To Mother’s Health Status

The probability of having one’s child receive an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) diagnosis involves a mother’s own medical conditions and her use of health services prior to having the child, a new study finds. What is not clear, however, is whether the effects are due to biological, environmental or psychosocial factors - or some combination of these.

Childhood Anxiety Disorders Can And Should Be Treated, According To UT Southwestern National Expert

Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents should be recognized and treated to prevent educational underachievement and adult substance abuse, anxiety disorders and depression, says a nationally recognized child psychiatrist from UT Southwestern Medical Center. In an editorial appearing in the Dec. 25 issue of New England Journal of Medicine, Dr.

Baby & child health and safety roundup

Baby & child health and safety roundup

PED Here are some recent developments in child health and safety news.

Last week, the Centers for Disease Control put pregnant women, children 6 months and older, and people caring for infants under 6 months old on their list of the first groups to get immunized against swine (H1N1) flu when the vaccine becomes available, probably sometime this fall. See the full Health blog post.

A recent large study shows how closely children's daytime activity was tied to the onset of sleep. Even modest changes in activity (for example, walking to school rather than driving) might affect how quickly a child falls asleep—not to mention their overall fitness. See the full Health blog post.

A disturbing number of kids–more than 2,000 each year–get seriously hurt, and a few die, after reaching, climbing, or falling into washers and dryers, or toppling down from them. What makes these easy hiding places is that the doors on these machines are often left open as a strategy to minimize mold growth. See the full Safety blog post.

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Personalized Baby Boy Gift: What To Give To Your New Nephew

Are you one of those first time aunts and uncles who cannot seem to decide what gifts to give to their new nephews? (…)

Q&A: Mercury in fish

Recent news stories have suggested that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is considering relaxing its fish-consumption advice for vulnerable populations, such as women of child-bearing age, pregnant women, nursing mothers, and young children. The stories are based on a…

Q&A: Can I skip a convertible car seat?

Q&A: Can I skip a convertible car seat?

Convertible car seat Blog_badge_qa

My 21-pound 11 month old is outgrowing his infant car seat. To save money, can I skip a convertible car seat and just buy a toddler booster?

You could—but it’s not the safest idea. That’s because a convertible car seat can be used rear facing and a toddler booster seat can’t. In fact, many convertible models offer the potential to keep babies and toddlers rear facing until they weigh 35 pounds (depending on the model), and the rear-facing mode offers the greatest protection in the event of an accident. “The longer you can keep your baby rear-facing, the better,” says Kisha Price, a health educator and certified child passenger safety technician at the Johns Hopkins Children’s Safety Center in Baltimore. (Learn more about why rear-facing longer is better.)

At the 35-pound point, you turn a convertible car seat around and your child faces forward until he reaches the seat’s weight limit in that mode, which is generally up to 40 pounds, though some convertible seats have front-facing weight limits of 65 pounds or more. Models typically have an adjustable five-point harness system, which we recommend based on our tests. (See concerned about rear-facing babies?)

With a toddler booster seat, on the other hand, your child rides front facing with the car seat’s own internal harness from 20 to 40 pounds, though some toddler booster seats go up to up to 65 or even as high as 80 pounds, for kids who are heavier or larger than average for their age. (Learn more about all car seat types.)

Because a convertible car seat keeps your baby riding rear facing initially, we recommend buying one with a five-point harness instead of a toddler booster as your baby’s next-stage car seat (when he outgrows his infant car seat). To save money, consider buying a convertible car seat with a weight limit of 65 pounds or more. That move will allow you to possibly skip a toddler booster and jump to a belt-positioning booster when your child is ready. A belt-positioning booster is designed for kids weighing 40 to 100 pounds. A belt-positioning booster uses only the vehicle’s own safety belts to restrain your child but it’s designed to correctly position both the lap and the shoulder portions of the vehicle’s belt correctly across the stronger parts of your child’s body, the collarbone and hip area. It should be used until your child is at least 57 inches tall—the minimum height at which car seat belts will fit a child correctly.

See our latest convertible car seats report and Ratings (for subscribers).

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Thrifty parent: Should you opt for a travel system?

Thrifty parent: Should you opt for a travel system?

Consumer Reports Best Baby Products If you’re in the market for a stroller and infant car seat, this question has undoubtedly crossed your mind. A travel system offers one-stop shopping: It consists of an infant car seat, a car-seat base for your car, and a separate stroller all in one. With these systems, you create a carriage by snapping an infant car seat into a stroller. When your baby can sit up, then you use the stroller without the car seat. The snap-on car seat is generally positioned atop the stroller so the infant rides facing you—the person pushing. Once your baby can sit up, she can ride in the stroller seat without a car seat.

Pros: A travel system allows you to move a sleeping baby in an infant car seat undisturbed from car to stroller and vice versa. Some also have a seat that fully reclines, so you can use it as a carriage, with the infant car seat. (See all stroller types.)

Cons: With travel systems, a car seat and stroller are typically sold together. But you can also create your own by combining a car seat and stroller. If you select the car seat first, you have to live with the stroller it works with (and vice versa). An alternative is to choose a stroller that holds car seats from a number of manufacturers. With all travel systems, you have to push around a car seat and a stroller, which can be bulky and unmanageable on stairs.

Verdict: Consider your lifestyle before buying a travel system. If you’re a city dweller who negotiates more subway stairs than highways or if the trunk of your car isn’t too roomy, you may be better off with a separate car seat and a compact stroller that offers a reclined, safely-enclosed space that’s appropriate for a newborn, or an infant car seat with a car-seat carrier frame. Buying a travel system forces you to think about the type of stroller you’ll want to use now and later. If you’re not ready to make that decision, buy an infant car seat and an infant car-seat carrier frame. That should tide you over until your baby outgrows his infant car seat (at about a year).

Thrift tip: It can be cheaper to buy a travel system as a unit rather than as separate components. We estimate that you can save $60 to $100 that way. Plus you won’t have to match the car seat and stroller yourself. But be sure to evaluate the stroller as a stand-alone item first, since you’ll be using that longer than the infant car seat that goes with it.

Learn more about every kind of baby product in our latest Consumer Reports Guide to Baby Products, available in our bookstore and in bookstores nationwide.

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