Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

The Power Of Skin-To-Skin Contact With Your Newborn

IANS, 11 Jul, 2016 11:35 AM
    A new study has suggested that skin-to-skin bonding, where a new baby is placed directly onto his mother’s chest, is important for his biology.
     
    The study showed that a mother’s body regulates and stabilises her baby’s biology when held in ‘skin-to-skin,’ the Mirror reported.
     
    Dr Susan Ludington, an expert in mother and baby contact, conducted investigation using heart rate, oxygen and breathing monitors as well as an infrared technology to capture body temperature.
     
    Dr Ludington monitored three new mums holding their days’ old babies in a swaddled position and then having a skin-to-skin contact.
     
    All three mums witnessed how this skin to skin contact regulated their babies’ breathing, heart rate, oxygen levels and temperature within five minutes of being held in this position.
     
     
    Dr Ludington said: “For this first time in this film we can actually see how being on your chest helps stabilise everything for baby; 
    within five minutes of being held in skin to skin, we witness these mothers’ chests regulating their babies’ temperatures beautifully.”
     
    She added, “This happens because both baby and mother synchronise and regulate each other’s biology when skin to skin contact occurs.”

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose
    Have a good look at your partner's fingers during the ring ceremony as men with short index fingers and long ring fingers are nicer towards women, says a study.

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago
    Using data from over 150 languages, linguists from University of California, Berkeley have found that "Indo-European languages" originated 5,500-6,500 years ago on the Pontic-Caspian steppe stretching from Moldova, Ukraine to Russia and western Kazakhstan.

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk
    Female physicians are approximately one and a half times more likely to be divorced than male physicians of a similar age, says a study.

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk

    How Stress Can Make You Poorer

    How Stress Can Make You Poorer
    Stress can make people with high level of anxiety poorer by denting their confidence to compete, suggests a new study. The findings suggest that stress can even be a cause of social inequality rather than just a consequence of it.

    How Stress Can Make You Poorer

    Why Workplace Bullying Goes Underreported

    Why Workplace Bullying Goes Underreported
    Bullying at work deteriorates mental health of victims so much that they become anxious, leaving them less able to stand up for themselves and more vulnerable to further harassment, warns a study.

    Why Workplace Bullying Goes Underreported

    Like It Or Not Couples As Happy As They Appear On Facebook

    Like It Or Not Couples As Happy As They Appear On Facebook
    Whether you "like" it or not, couples who flaunt how happy they are with their partners through selfies, pictures, or text messages on Facebook are actually more satisfied with their partners than those who do not, says a study.

    Like It Or Not Couples As Happy As They Appear On Facebook