The Happiest Baby Guide to Great Sleep
Simple Solutions for Kids from Birth to 5 Years
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
America’s favorite pediatrician, Dr. Harvey Karp, now focuses his unparalleled knowledge, experience, and insight on solving the #1 concern of parents everywhere: sleep. With The Happiest Baby Guide to Great Sleep, Dr. Karp—arguably the world’s foremost parenting expert and bestselling author of The Happiest Baby on the Block and The Happiest Toddler on the Block—offers invaluable tips on how to help your newborn, infant, or toddler get the rest they need, while debunking some of the most widely held myths about babies and sleep. Dr. Karp’s advice has already be sought after by some of Hollywood’s brightest stars—including Michelle Pfeiffer, Pierce Brosnan, and Madonna—and now his The Happiest Baby Guide to Great Sleep can help anyone guide even the most resistant small child gently toward wonderful, restful, healthful slumber, so that mom and dad can enjoy a good night’s sleep themselves!
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Popular pediatrician Karp (The Happiest Baby on the Block) points out that 60% 80% of parents say their kids have sleep problems. These make life all the more difficult for sleep-deprived parents who may get less than six hours of sleep per night and desperately grapple with conflicting bedtime advice from parenting experts and others. Karp lays a number of myths to rest in his latest book, including the idea that babies, who have shorter sleep cycles than adults, can't learn better sleep habits before three months of age. In fact, he gets right to work giving parents tips and tools to help their newborns develop good sleeping patterns, and then moves on to older babies and toddlers. Among the keys to Karp's sleep solutions are using womblike white noise, swaddling, and waking baby for a "dream" sleep before putting him down (in his own crib, co-sleeper, or bassinet rather than bed-sharing until he is at least four months old to help prevent SIDS). Karp does not recommend the "crying it out" method (arguing that the approach has a bad effect on an infant's sense of trust and security) except when all other measures fail. For older kids, he presents a humorously labeled "twinkle interruptus" tactic, in which the parents teach their child "patience stretching." Exhausted parents will warmly welcome Karp's encouraging tone and innovative, think-outside-the-crib solutions.