T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
818.1 | Try for double-duty | STAR::LEWIS | | Mon Apr 08 1991 11:23 | 13 |
| We never had a changing table for Andy, just a pad on an appropriate
sized dresser. It's a little tough now, since he's stronger and
squirmier, but I just quickly change his diaper on the dresser, then
put him on the floor to change his clothes. For what it's worth, you
can buy a corral-type attachment for the top of a dresser to make it
more like a changing table.
We had a swing that he hated as an infant. Your mileage may vary
greatly. We used a playpen for him to nap in on our first floor when
he was very young. It does, however, take over half of our living room.
We now use it as a large toy box.
|
818.2 | you can do without a lot! | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Mon Apr 08 1991 11:31 | 50 |
| Alot of the currently-available baby stuff is obviously *not necessary*.
People have been raising babies for eons without most of these things.
Your decision to skip the cradle sounds goood. You might want to lay the
baby width-wise in the crib and roll a blanket to confine the size of the
crib when the baby is very young.
This list is my experience only...I'm sure there are folks who couldn't live
without something I found to be non-essential. This list is based on the
experience of one child:
Necessities (cause it's the law!):
==================================
Car seat/carrier - get one that does both for the added convenience and
space saving
Nice to have:
=============
Stoller (of some type, definitely something that collapses due to your
space limitations, though you might consider storing it in your
trunk!)
Walker - personal experience only
Can Live without:
=================
Swing- maybe borrow one; relieving yourself of the need to store long-term
High chair - really, my son's babysitter doesn't have one!
Baby Monitor
Snuggli
Tons of Stuffed Animals and Toys
Didn't Use at all:
==================
Changing Table (well, okay, I used it for a couple months..most changes are
done on the sofa or the floor)
Baby Bath Tub (the kitchen sink worked better)
Play pen (NEVER USED - there's a whole note on playpen pro/cons somewhere)
Clothing -
===========
I recommend 1-pc. t-shirts for babies until they reach toilet training age.
Regular t-shirts just bunch up in their armpits! The ones that snap all
the way up the front are easiest for young babies without good head control.
Outfits and pajamas with built-in feet are also my choice up until around
9 months. Had no use for shoes until then either.
I'll stop now. This note is already too long!
Carol
|
818.3 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Mon Apr 08 1991 11:53 | 70 |
| Things that stayed in the closet or drawers ....
Nightgowns (like the kind the hospital uses that tie at the back) ....
Sleepers / "baby-gro"s were just so much more convenient
Sleepers that opened at the back
Most dresses except when it was time for pro photos! (We let the grandparents
and aunties buy all the early dresses!)
Fancy clothes ... our kids always tended to glurp up their food so fancy
appliques on clothes always tended to get shot at ... so to keep them
looking reasonable they stayed away ... then they rarely got worn.
(So ... save your money ... let relatives buy the fancy clothes!)
Lots of sheets and blankets ... We got a number of bottoms but only a
few tops (they tend to get kicked down the bed under whatever's on top
anyway) and got a couple of crib size quilts (comforters) and some
blankets for winter.
Vests ... we used a few vests ... but they were as much of a pain as a
blessing ... they tend to ride up on the chest. They were useful
before the cord came off becasue the sleepers tended to catch on it.
Pillows ... we never used a pillow for our kids until they were about 2.
Baby towels etc ... apart from one hooded towel the girls used our
day to day towels etc
Gadgets ... the only gadget that got a lot of use was the Snugli carrier.
We didn't have a monitor for the first 2 kids, although it was handy
with the last.
Feeding paraphernalia ... there was lots of stuff that we just didn't use
and wouldn't really have used if we had them.
Bottle sterilization equipment ... fortunately we never had any, and
quickly started using disposable feeders. Most was washed in the
dishwasher and "sterilized" in a pan on the stove! (And that nonsense
only lasted about 4 months!)
Things that really got used a lot ...
Receiving blankets ...
Diapers ... English style flannelette and terry towel ... but not just as
diapers ... they were clothes protectors (over the shoulder when
burping) ... feed moppers ... dribble catchers ... sick mops (under
the head on the bed) ... puddle preventers (when "airing" the bottom).
Sleepers
Bibs ... with the plastic on the right side ... When they are little
the plastic goes on the baby side. When they are bigger and eating messy
food, the plastic goes on the food side! Kangaroo bibs are handy later.
Bouncy chair ... a cloth hammock style chair, slightly tipped up, on a
bouncable wire frame. You can bounce it easily with your toe while
sitting in your favourite chair! Thus keeping baby relatively happy.
A wind up swing ... We didn't have one for our first ... the colicky one
and sadly regretted it when we had one for #2!
The layette lists are just phenomenal ... but just think about what you your
baby really needs and you won't go far wrong.
Stuart
|
818.4 | | PHAROS::PATTON | | Mon Apr 08 1991 12:01 | 20 |
| I too live in a small apartment, so I know what you mean about
wanting only the essentials. The trouble is, sometimes you don't
know what's essential til you get there...
We didn't have room for a playpen, so never considered it. We also
skipped the portable crib, though I see how handy they are. Someone
gave us an infant swing, but like .1, our baby hated it - you may need
one if your child finds it comforting.
One thing I found very useful was a baby seat; could be a Rocka-Roo
or the portable part of an infant car seat. Another thing that was
a big hit was a jolly jumper type seat/swing - didn't take much space.
You don't need a lot of equipment when they're very little. We used
a Snuggli when ours was tiny, later a backpack and stroller. At about
eight months we got him a highchair. You could even avoid that by
using a sassy seat if you have the right kind of table.
Lucy
|
818.5 | | TLE::STOCKSPDS | Cheryl Stocks | Mon Apr 08 1991 12:15 | 26 |
| My list of essentials for a newborn:
1. diapers
2. a car seat
3. a place for the baby to sleep
Everything else is optional!
There are some tradeoffs you can make. You can have less clothes, bedding,
etc. if you're willing to do laundry frequently. If laundry facilities
aren't *very* convenient, you'll probably want to get more clothes (but
baby clothes don't take up much space, anyway). Toys and books can wait
until your baby is old enough to enjoy them (at least 3 months, I'd say).
That gives you a chance to find out what the baby's tastes are, so that
you don't get a lot of stuff that just sits around neglected. We do our
toy shopping with the kids along, so we can see what they're attracted to
at the store, and use that as a guide for what to buy.
It's awfully hard to resist all those wondeful baby things! You might
also want to start thinking about how to keep down the volume of gift
toys and gadgets - we've found that almost all the toys that gather dust
are gift toys, and a lot of the clothes that bever get worn are also
gifts. (I must confess that a lot of the unused "gadgets" are things
we bought ourselves, though.)
cheryl
|
818.6 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Mon Apr 08 1991 12:17 | 7 |
| > 1. diapers
> 2. a car seat
> 3. a place for the baby to sleep
... and the place for the baby to sleep can perfectly well be your own bed,
so even that doesn't require any extra expense (or space taken up in an
apartment).
|
818.7 | My $.02, which became an $.05 | ICS::NELSONK | | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:03 | 48 |
| There are probably as many opinions on "what a baby really needs"
as there are babies, parents, and grandparents!
In clothing:
Onesies (one piece underwear that snaps at the crotch. Keeps
diapers from slipping! Also handy for the little one to wear
alone in warm weather.)
One-piece sleepers -- INVALUABLE.
Diapers. Whichever way you go (disposables or cloth), keep some
of the other kind on hand for the day when you run out, can't get
to the laundromat, etc., etc. If you use cloth diapers, get some
waterproof pants.
Equipment:
Car seat. The only problem with getting the kind that doubles as an
infant seat is that you're constantly taking it in and out of the car.
For convenience's sake, you may want to get a regular infant seat
that you can keep in the house. Depending on your babys size and
activity level, you can use this for feedings, etc., till the baby
is six months or so.
Crib. Much more useful to us than a bassinet. Although I wish now
I had had a porta-crib; the collapsible play yard we used was
awfully awkward to schlep around to Grandma's, Auntie's, etc.
Bedding:
Fitted crib sheets
Receiving blankets. Buy plenty of both.
Something like a sweater or jacket to wear for the cool weather or
if going into an air conditioned store. A hat may be useful, too,
but James hated hats.
I found a swing was a real godsend, but they do take up space. Some
babies adore them, some detest them. See if you can borrow one
and try it out; if the baby likes it, then you can decide if you
want to buy or not.
I wouldn't bother with toys, books, mobiles, or any of that jazz
right now. They're fun later, but in these first months, all the
baby really needs is you.
Good luck!
|
818.8 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:18 | 24 |
| >... and the place for the baby to sleep can perfectly well be your own bed,
For some this works ... but for others this is a disaster.
. It can cause all kinds of resentment between you and your partner
(baby is more important than partner etc ...)
. The child grows up thinking they can come into your bed at just
any old time ... privacy can be difficult (!)
. Sleep is already at a premium for you and / or your partner and
having baby in the same room (let alone bed) can result in even
more disturbances if you are "sensitive" to the baby's sleeping
noises.
. Sore backs etc ... as you try to position yourself to sleep in
a manner to avoid baby. Once the baby starts to be able to move,
they have an uncanny ability to be able to rotate sideways in
the bed and kick the middle of your back. (We didn't have any
of ours regularly in our bed but I have woken up enough times
when we did to learn to tell the difference between the kid's
kidney kicks and real kidney problems!)
. If you are a restless sleeper, and toss and turn a lot, there may
not be enough room in anything less than a queen or king size
bed.
Stuart
|
818.9 | Stuff we used | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:28 | 28 |
| Another opinion:
We didn't use the "onesies" (snap-crotch t-shirts) for our October
baby. She gets hot easily and was comfortable wearing just the terry
stretchy or blanket sleeper. She never wears t-shirts. Sears carries
terry stretchies at a reasonable price and they are accurately sized in
a whole range.
Socks. We go through one or two plain white pairs per day.
A baby blanket. Useful for wrapping your fall newborn to keep the
chills away. You can also use a large adult wool sweater for wrapping
OR on top of a sleeping baby.
We change her on the bed. Rubber changing pads with flannel on both
sides have been very useful.
A sleeping bag, baby-size.
A vinyl shoulder-strap bag to use as a diaper bag.
Playtex disposable bottle system.
Musical mobile. She adored hers. It was the first thing she smiled
at.
That's it for now. . .
Laura
|
818.10 | Long list to follow........... | ISLNDS::BARR_L | Dynamic Memory Exhausted | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:41 | 53 |
| My son is 8 months old (he was born at the end of July) and these
are the things I have found very useful so far:
Clothing
--------
Onesies (I don't know how my mother lived without them! :-) )
socks (if your baby won't be wearing crib shoes, you'll need lots
of warm ones)
blanket sleepers (especially if your baby will be born in September)
a snow suit (I tried using the pram suits but found they just weren't
warm enough)
a hat or two (the babies head should be covered at all times while
outside in the winter months)
lots of sweat suits
Furniture
---------
changing table (I, personally, could not live without it)
crib
Miscellaneous
-------------
cloth diapers (I used them for burp rags. If you're going to use
cloth diapers as opposed to disposables, you'll also need diaper
pins and plastic pants)
baby seat (I used to put Shane in his seat to give him his bottle
when I was busy trying to cook dinner and he decided that he couldn't
wait)
wind-up swing (this was a God send!)
Johnny Jump-Up (keeps him occupied for hours!)
crib sheets
receiving blankets (they make great covers for the changing table
pad)
baby quilts and afghans
diaper pail (I use this as his hamper)
walker (I have two, one at home and one at my mother's. I think
Shane would go nuts without it)
Things I could do with out
--------------------------
cradle
playpen (it takes up too much room and he only screams when I put
him in it)
most of his toys
his fancy clothes
baby bath (as a previous noter mentioned, the kitchen sink works
better)
Lori B.
|
818.11 | from our experience... | CRONIC::ORTH | | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:42 | 35 |
| After 3 kids and expecting #4, here is what we found "essential":
* crib
* place to change diapers (and this could be bed, couch or floor...but
remember if you have to bend or lean too much, it can cause backaches)
* stroller of some sort (or a snuggli when thery're small enough)
* car seat
* infant seat for the house (too much hassle, in our opinions, to take
car seat in and out all the time).
*clothing:
-lots of onesies type undershirts
-lots of stretchy sleepers
-2 or 3 pairs of socks (sometimes, if chilly enough, you may want to
put them on under the sleepers.)
-2 or 3 nice outfits (relatives frequently buy these!)
-a snowsuit, if you live where you'll need one
-a sweater
-and, obviously, diapers!
May be essential...
*baby monitor....if you cannot hear the baby in its room, when you are,
say, in the kitchen cooking dinner. Beats running to their room every 5
minutes!
Nice, but certainly not necessary:
*swing - ours liked 'em...yours may or may not
*jumper (the kind that hang in the doorways) ours *loved, loved, LOVED*
these and freed up many minutes to do other things for mom & dad.
*walker - again, ours loved these, but you can get by just as nicely
without one!
hope all the suggestions have helped you!
--dave--
|
818.12 | cribs are a recent invention for consumers | WINDY::SHARON | broken wrist = no caps | Mon Apr 08 1991 13:54 | 11 |
| re: .8
i know many families who never used a crib without all the horrible
consequences mentioned and who talk of many benefits.
you might try living without it for a few months and borrow a bassinet
to experiment with later when you can monitor the dog. cribs are
expensive and big so it could be a prime candidate for your space
saving requirement.
=ss
|
818.13 | | CSC32::DUBOIS | Sister of Sappho | Mon Apr 08 1991 14:25 | 3 |
| Also see notes 303.* for what clothes are really needed.
Carol dB, PARENTING co-moderator
|
818.14 | | XAPPL::ROLLMAN | | Mon Apr 08 1991 14:56 | 55 |
|
I would buy the minimum you need at first. I would also consider borrowing/
renting as much of the equipment as you can, simply because most of it you
won't need after the first few months.
My sister laughed when I said I was going to just put my daughter in toddler
t-shirts and tie a knot at the bottom. I actually did do that at times and
it worked just fine.
We could not have lived without:
Infant seat - the kind with metal frame and cloth seat stretched across it. She
did all her naps in it for the first month.
Infant swing - sometimes was the only thing that could calm that colicky baby.
This was a loan from friends; she outgrew it at the same time as the colic.
I often carried her in this at malls, etc, before her head was stable enough
for a snugly.
I bought a sling when she was about 6 weeks, and wish I had had one from the
beginning.
Crib - this is her place. When she's over-tired or sick, she wants to be in
her crib. She stretches out and relaxes.
Sleepers/sleeping bags - she prefers the bags. Better kicking, I think.
Receiving blankets - these have so many uses, including emergency diaper, that
I can't begin to list them. You'll think of more. We bought 4 and friends
loaned us 10 more. However, she's 4 months old and we rarely use them anymore.
Monitor - only because we had a two floor house. We rarely use it anymore.
We've developed "parent's ears" and can hear her thru multiple closed doors with
the stereo blasting. (I think she sends psychic waves...)
Bath sponge - baby shaped sponge to put in bathtub. You lay the baby on it in
a few inches of water. Costs about $7 at Sears.
Walker - but not until 3-4 months. You could also use this to feed the
baby, if you don't mind sitting on the floor to do it.
I didn't like:
Onesies - if she trashed more than her diaper, they required a complete
undressing to change her. Newborns hate having their clothes off and they
trash a lot of diapers.
Clothes with fasteners in the back. Now, at 4 months, that's ok, because she
can sort of sit up while I fasten them.
|
818.15 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Mon Apr 08 1991 15:04 | 35 |
| > -< cribs are a recent invention for consumers >-
>
Since when ? Baby beds go back hundreds of years!
> i know many families who never used a crib without all the horrible
> consequences mentioned and who talk of many benefits.
Look at the LaLeche League book "The WOmanly Art ..." and they'll agree
whole heartedly with you ... to the point of having family beds. But
where the parents get the quiet time to themselves and the time to make
kids without exposing their kids to what they are up to is beyond me!
As usual though ... to each his own -- I prefer the privacy.
> cribs are
> expensive and big so it could be a prime candidate for your space
> saving requirement.
Eurpoean size cribs are definitely more compact ... look at IKEA if there's
one near you (I believe there's one near Boston) ... BUT cribs don't have
to be expensive. Ours was (1981 prices) $60 for the crib and $40 for the
foam mattress. It has now lasted for 3 children, and if it wasn't for
the modified safety requirements, it would do some more! Sure, it's no
Jenny Lind crib ... but it did the job perfectly adequately.
In another note, re the baby monitor someone talked of running to check on
baby every 5 minutes ... If I was that nervous about our kids, I'd have
had a nervous breakdown. I cannot ever remember a situation where we
were checking that often, if we checked hourly, that was a lot, unless
we heard crying ... and we rarely needed a monitor for that! We used the
monitor to feel more comfortable about going for short walks in the park
across the street (put a radio on softly ... when you can't hear the
radio anymore you're out of range) and we were never more than a minute's
run from the door ...
Stuart
|
818.16 | IKEA | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Mon Apr 08 1991 15:54 | 12 |
| Someone sent me mail to enquire about IKEA stores ... I made my comment
about "near Boston" based on stylised map in their Canadian catalogue.
Ha Ha ... I called our Ottawa IKEA and got the following :
Pittsburgh PA
Elizabeth NJ
Baltimore MD
Long Island NY
Burbank CA (!)
Stuart
|
818.17 | One more opinion | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Mon Apr 08 1991 17:44 | 33 |
| A lot of what you can/cannot live with depends on when your baby is
born. Mine was born in May and I hardly used socks at all until the
fall.. I used receiving blankets to lie her on and that sort of thing.
I used the snugli only a few times, cause I was too hot when she was in
it.
Once she turned a couple of months old, I used onsies daily. But early
on I found the regular side-snap undershirts easier to use since I
usually had to change her three times a day due to a soiled diaper.
I second the advice on finding out if your child likes a swing. Gina
*loved* hers, and at nearly 11 months still uses it every day. (She is
well under the 25 pound limit of our swing and now walks over to it to
indicate that she wants to get in it.) Early on we would use it to get
a peaceful dinner for us.
If you get a porta-crib, you can always leave it packed up and in the
car or a closet until you need it for a trip or an evening at a
friend's house. Then it doesn't take up too much room. Our portacrib
is by Fisher Price and had a basinet-type sling in it. This was nice
to use downstairs, but in a garden-style condo that shouldn't be
necessary.
Here's what I think you can definitely live without:
Baby lotion, oil, powder, etc. (I got tons of this, and have used the
lotion a few times, and never anything else.)
Basinett
Baby scale
Good luck!
judy
|
818.18 | Breastpump? | NEWPRT::WAHL_RO | | Tue Apr 09 1991 12:31 | 12 |
|
My vote is with the swingers! We had a wind-up with #1 and it was my
only sanity during the colic. We were loaned a battery operated one
with #2 and liked it so well we bought one for upstairs too. She's
10.5 months. I have the swing in the bathroom where I can see it from
the shower. Its great for outside too, frees hands for gardening and
washing the car.
Another important item for breastfeeding moms is a breast pump. The
hospital gave me mine, it was a Godsend the first few days.
Rochelle
|
818.19 | fuzzy, underdeveloped & dense input | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Tue Apr 09 1991 13:44 | 24 |
| Nursing pads (disposable or washable) are a definite must; whether you
intend to nurse or not, you *will* leak!
Agreed on the oils, lotions, powder, etc - you'll get tons of it from
well-meaning friends & relatives, plus the hospital goody-bag. The
only stuff I used, and only when a rash necessitated it, was Desitin.
Baby wipes - your mileage may vary, but I liked the thin kind -
inexpensive, plus I found them easier to use when wiping sticky poop!
You don't feel so bad about using a few of them from an el-cheapo vat
of 150-count, vs. the they-must-be-made-of-silk-at-this-price types
that come 40 to a treasure chest. But a lot of people like the
cushiony quality of the latter.
One of the best inventions since sliced bread: hooded sweaters that zip
down the back (especially for a fall baby). EASY to put on a baby who
can't sit up by self.
My breast pump wasn't worth the powder to blow it up... I collected
what was leaking from the "off" breast while Alex nursed. But she also
had bottles of formula at daycare, so I didn't need to do any
stockpiling.
Leslie
|
818.20 | And stuff for Mama | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Tue Apr 09 1991 14:33 | 19 |
| Speaking of breastfeeding, you also need suitable clothing for the
duration. By suitable, I mean shirts or sweaters that will allow you
to breastfeed without getting undressed, and clothing of the same size
you wore during the first trimester. Many women don't lose weight
easily while they are nursing. (Some do.) I borrowed my husband's
sweatsuits to wear at home. My now-tight sweatshirts were very
uncomfortable. Also nursing bras; JC Penney catalog has a good
selection. Even if you don't leak, the thin washable pads keep your
clothes from chafing. Oh, and bring large-ish cotton panties to wear
home from the hospital, ones that come up to your waist. You won't
want to wear anything tight. You'll probably also want an easy-care
hair style because for several months there won't be time to fuss with
styling.
The baby will be fine in most any clothing you scrounge up, but after
going through pregnancy, birth and nursing, you'll want comfort and
maybe something new and attractive.
Laura
|
818.21 | baby things | DPDMAI::DICKEY | | Tue Apr 09 1991 14:50 | 25 |
| I know what you mean about living in a small place. We live in a one
bedroom apartment. Poor Stephen (who was born last Sept.) has his crib
in the dining area.
I found that the things he uses/used the most are:
Onesies (great in the winter as underwear, great in the summer as all
he wears)
Crib blankets not receiving blankets, they are outgrown too fast.
socks, sweat suits, snowsuit, (don't buy sweater outfits they get the
baby too hot), cloth diapers (good for protecting yourself against baby
spit), oversleeper, baby seat, swing (baby loved it), crib sheets,
bumper pads, baby bath (I would put the tub on the counter in the
bathroom and Stephen loved to watch himslef in the mirror)
Things never used:
monitor
cradle (outgrew REAL fast)
playpen (no room and too heavy to drag up and down the stairs)
Try to find a resale shop for things you would like to have, but know
you won't need for too long.
Kathy
|
818.22 | My list .... | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Apr 09 1991 15:52 | 102 |
| We scrunched into the bottom of our house (4 rooms, incl kitchen and
living room) for the first 4 years, so I know what you mean by 'No
Room'!
Things to not even consider;
Playpen (BIG toy box!)
Snugli (scrunched my kids....)
Onesies (if top OR bottom gets messy, you need to undress everything,
and winter babies HATE this!)
Cradle (What's the point? Use the crib)
Changing Table (Use the bed/kitchen table (with a towel on it) - we
didn't have one for our first and didn't mind at all!)
Johnny Jumper (sort of strangled them, and was ALWAYS in the way)
Shoes/boots (Until they're walking)
Toys/stuffed animals
Bottle sterilizer - We washed 'em w/ a bottle washer, and occassionally
a spin through the dishwasher. Boil nipples when I felt INCREDIBLY
guilty - it's all hype - we did none of that 'boiling' stuff for Jason
and he's fine (though he does like to eat dirt (-;)
Baby oil, q-tips, powder
Disposable bottles - Take one of those plastic liners, fill it w/
water, let it sit for about 1/2 hour, and then taste the water.
YUMMY I LOVE to drink plastic! Yech!!
MUST Have's;
Baby-seat for IN the house. (The baby's portable now...!)
Car seat (One that will hold a toddler too- don't spend your money
twice)
Baby Swing (It's the only reason the boys are still alive (-: )
Stroller (They get HEAVY, especially wandering the malls....)
Baby monitor (If a spring baby and you want to be doing yard work or a
winter baby and you're out shoveling, it's nice to not have
to keep running in to check - and you WILL be that nervous!)
Crib-size blankets
Walker which you also use as a high-chair
Get a regular (twin size) sheet and cut it in 4, hem and you have 4
unfitted crib sheets. Worked out MUCH better than struggling to get
the pre-made ones to fit!! And if you're handy, you can make curtains
from the sheets to match! Or a quilt - or lots of things.
Sleepers
T-shirts
Gowns w/ the ties on the bottom (Though Toddler-T-shirts sounds like a
MUCH better idea!)
Sox or feet things.
Baking Soda baby-powder for the SUMMER to keep dry
Desitin
Diaper-wipes with NO Alcohol (I like the thin kind better)
A hat
One-piece winter 'coat'
Cloth diapers (to pick up spit up and every other thing. We bought
DOZENS and now, years later, my husband uses them to wash the cars...)
Pacifier/Bottles/Bottle-Brush/Nipples - Don't buy a TON of anything
yet. Your baby may prefer a particular nipple to some other brand.
Buy a few now and decide what the baby REALLY likes later, THEN stock
up!
If you use cloth diapers, a diaper pail. We never bothered w/ the "One
pail to soak, one pail to rinse, one more pail just in case..." stuff.
Just in the washer, bleach 'em out every few weeks (rinse, rinse,
rinse!), and no problems. A plastic trash barrel w/ a cover from a
plastic bowl works perfect (ask me how I know...)
Okay/maybe's
o Baby bathtub - we used it for a little while when the baby was VERY
small, and then just switched to the kitchen sink.
o Baby sponge - to help the baby from slipping around in the sink/tub.
A cloth diaper on the bottom works also.
o Baby bath/baby shampoo. Nice to have so it doesn't sting the baby,
but not necessary
o Quilts/sleeping bags. Sometimes they get too hot - many thinner
blankets let you layer for the different seasons.
o Small (4oz) baby bottles. Half-fill the big ones saves lots of
cabinet space, and after a few mos. you'll never use the small ones
again. Maybe buy a COUPLE. I preferred the glass bottles cuz
they're easier to clean and don't pick up odors, but they're so HEAVY
that baby can't hold them very well.
o High Chair. I swore by ours, but you could do without. The nicest
time is when the baby's in the "I want to throw food EVERYWHERE
stage - you can control the area that you don't mind having food
all over.
Please be ***VERY**** careful about putting baby in an adult bed. My
nephew was put to rest in his parent's bed and got rolled up in the
sheets and suffocated when he was 9 mos old. If you want baby in your
room, put the baby in the baby seat FIRST and then on the bed!! Better
yet, get baby their own crib, so they can start to learn the difference
between YOUR space and THEIR space. VERY Important!
And, of course, EVERY baby is different. There are VERY few things
you'll need when your baby first comes home. I'd suggest buying only
the crib, some clothes, diapers and bottle-stuff ahead of time. The
walker and swing won't be used for a few months, or perhaps not at all.
The biggest thing with the clothes is what YOU like to dress/undress
that wriggly little kid in - how good you are at grabbing an arm/leg,
stuffing it into a shirt/pants, and going for 3 more. My best advice
for the clothes is to get '1 of everything' and then buy more AFTER the
baby, depending on what you like. You'll know!!
GOOD LUCK!!!
|
818.23 | Go for a sassy seat vs high chair | WFOV12::MOKRAY | | Tue Apr 09 1991 16:46 | 4 |
| Try a sassy seat type chair vs a regular high chair. Some are molded
plastic but I've also seen one that has a cloth seat and folds flat.
THe baby can eat at whatever table you're at, it's mobile for visiting
and you don't have this THING sitting there all the time.
|
818.24 | | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Tue Apr 09 1991 16:51 | 4 |
| re .23 - well, not *every* table you're at. Dangerous to use on
pedestal tables or glass tables.
L.W.
|
818.25 | | PHAROS::PATTON | | Tue Apr 09 1991 17:29 | 5 |
| More on sassy seats - they don't work on tables that have a long
"skirt" underneath - the seat may fit on the table, but there's
nowhere for the baby's legs to go.
Lucy
|
818.26 | IMHO - More on Onesies.... | ISLNDS::BARR_L | Dynamic Memory Exhausted | Tue Apr 09 1991 17:53 | 12 |
| I really can't understand how anyone can say that onsies are
a pain in the neck to change. I would never be without them. So what
if you have to change everything if they get soiled? Whenever my son
went through a diaper and it was bad enough to have to change his
onesie, if he didn't have the onesie on, I'd probably have to change
all of his clothes anyway (it usually went up his back!). :-) I go
for getting at least a couple to try them out, and if you don't
like them, then don't use them. Besides, it's alot easier than
constantly trying to tuck their shirts back into their pants and also,
their backs are always covered when they have a onesie on.
Lori B.
|
818.27 | Borrow or buy used... | BRAT::DISMUKE | | Tue Apr 09 1991 18:57 | 17 |
| 1. Borrow as much as possible. (especially swings, people don't want to
store and will be happy to loan out.)
2. Wait until after your shower. (I got tons of onsies, afghans and
sweater sets, crib sheets/blankets. Even a monitor! Let other people
spend the money....they will be angry if you go shopping before the
shower and get something they bought you.)
3. When you have to buy, buy used. (Make sure current safety stands
apply) Infant car seats can be rented from the hospital fairly
inexpensively.
Definately try not to buy anything new that you can get from someone
else or get used tho. You'll need to money for other more important
things!
Ln
|
818.28 | Waterbeds - warning | CIMNET::MCCALLION | | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:32 | 2 |
| beware of leaving a baby/infant on a waterbed... that warning may be in
here already.. more than one baby has died..
|
818.29 | Waterbed Warning | NYTP06::ZINA | | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:55 | 6 |
| re. 28
Maybe I'm being a little dense but here goes....
Why is a waterbed so dangerous for a baby/infant? Is it more so than a regular
bed. I'm asking because I have a waterbed and am expecting my first in August.
|
818.30 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:57 | 8 |
|
re .29
Because waterbeds conforms to the body shape. If the baby is on the
tummy, she/he can suffocate as the bed "wraps" around the face.
Eva.
|
818.31 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Wed Apr 10 1991 16:00 | 8 |
|
ps. .30
If the waterbed has a frame (not softsided), the baby can
get trapped between the mattress and the frame.
Eva
|
818.32 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Wed Apr 10 1991 17:36 | 8 |
| re .30
We had a waterbed ... that wasn't an issue, but predominantly because
we used a mattress pad under the sheet.
re .31
That is the MAJOR problem.
|
818.33 | Baby Bitty items | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Aug 13 1991 10:22 | 24 |
|
There have been notes in here about what clothing is necessary for
babies and what furniture and equipment is necessary for babies. But
now I need to tap the resources of this file and ask:
What bitty items are needed for babies?
By bitty items I mean, thermometer, nail clippers, medicine spoons,
wash clothes,...
Bitty = small, easy to forget but apparently important
Other bitty things that they tell us are to buy lots of Q-tips to
clean the cord, wouldn't cotton balls work better? And do we really
need to wash everything in Dreft?
We saw some baby emery boards in the store the other day, do you
need those?
What are some of the bitty items that you have had to use for your
babies?
Wendy
|
818.34 | Some ideas.... | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Tue Aug 13 1991 10:35 | 26 |
|
Just a comment on the Q-Tips: I started out cleaning Anna's cord with
cotton balls with alcohol on them. When my sister came to visit when
Anna was 5 days old she suggested the Q-Tips. I found they work better.
As you tip the cord out of the way you can get under and around the
dried part of the cord better with a Q-Tip.
As for other bitty items: the baby nail scissors are a necessity, but
I have yet to use the little emery boards and Anna is almost 3 1/2
months old.
Knock on wood I have yet to use the medicine dropper or the
thermometer or the nasal aspirator.
Get plenty of washclothes. I go through at least one a day what with
baths and just washing her face. Anna had a blocked tear duct so I was
always having to wash her face as she would rub the goopy stuff from
her eye onto her check and forehead.
Little baby socks!! Even when it's warm enough for a onsie, Anna's feet
would feel cool unless it was sweltering hot out.
Can't think of anything else off the top of my head. If I do I'll add
more.
Patty
|
818.35 | Little bitty things | NOVA::WASSERMAN | Deb Wasserman, DTN 264-1863 | Tue Aug 13 1991 10:36 | 18 |
| A lot of these kind of things of you don't think of unless you see
them. Then you say "oh yeah, we could use that (and that, and that)".
What I did for the first few months after Marc was born was to cruise
the aisles of Toys R Us looking for things I hadn't thought of yet.
(Toys R Us has _everything_ :-)). They usually have one aisle with
all those "toiletries"-type things. Just go and look! The kind of
stuff I use all the time is:
- baby shampoo
- baby soap (squeeze bottle is best for one-hand use)
- nail clippers (never used emery boards)
- rectal thermometer
- cold medication (Triaminic, etc.)
- Q-tips
- baby powder
- Caldesene (sp?) powder for diaper rashes
- eyedropper for medicine (forget the baby spoons)
- baby hairbrush/comb
|
818.36 | a few more | JUPITR::MAHONEY | | Tue Aug 13 1991 10:57 | 10 |
|
I never use the baby nail clippers or emery boards. I found the baby
nail scissors to work better for me. Less chance of pinching the
fingers. Also, brush and comb (for those who have enough hair) I used
the brush from day one. Besides baby powder, Desitin, great for diaper
rash.
That's all I have, seems the last note coverd it all.
Sandy
|
818.37 | My opinions | CIMNET::JACOBSEN | Marcelle DTN 291-7032 | Tue Aug 13 1991 11:35 | 48 |
| I have used the emery board but not for major filing just when she got
a little older and had sharp edges on her nails that would scratch us.
I only used them after cutting the nails or when I didn't have time or
she was too wiggly to cut to get those sharp edges.
I agree with "forget about the medicine spoons" the dropper works much
better.
Petroleum jelly is great for the first little while.
I used a combination of Q-tips and cotton balls. Sometimes I'd wet the
cotton ball and squeeze the liquid from the ball onto the cord to get
it wet but I'd use the wet Q-tips to clean around the cord.
I don't care for the nail sissors they sell for baby's. The
nail clippers are ok when they are older, but the sissors are too bulky
and not tight enough. I used a pair of adult high quality manicure
(cuticle size) sissors. I accidently got some skin with the clippers
once when she was tiny, (made me cry too) and from then on until she was
about a year old it was the sissors for me.
I've gone through lots of Tempra. I bought the small bottle size once
with the dropper and from then on I keep refilling the bottle from the
large size container. I also got another dropper bottle from the
doctors at the time of her first shots and keep that in her diaper bag.
Emily seems to prefer the taste of the grape Tempra to the orange
Tylenol and I think it is cheaper.
Don't buy too many pacifiers or any one kind of nipple until you find
out what kind your baby likes if any. I have about 6 different kinds
of pacifiers we tried and several different types of nipples and she
never took a pacifier and only likes Platex nipples but didn't even
take to those until she was several months old.
We never used the shoes we bought (except for Sunday's and pictures)
until she started walking at 9 months and then only for outside. So,
she didn't need size 0, 1, 2 shoes except for show. You can probably
get hand-me-downs from friends of those sizes or use booties.
I didn't need to buy baby lotion or powder in large sizes. One bottle
of the sample size was all I needed. I'm waiting for #2 now and have
tons of supplies of Desinex, Powder, Lotion, etc. left over from #1.
You never know what you're child will like. I hardly ever used a
snugly or a baby carrier because Emily wanted to see everything.
Marcelle
|
818.38 | more items for baby and you... | TENVAX::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,285-3450,NIO/N4,Pole H14-15 | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:09 | 43 |
| I think the previous notes have captured my list very nicely.
The major things that I forgot, and was SO glad, in hindsight,
that I got as gifts: soft hairbrush, lots of cotton socks (the
other stretchy ones just slipped off), and cotton hat. I used
all these almost immediately.
Things that my own experimentation added to the list:
- several waterproof cloths
I used these the first few months to line her carseat,
swing, under her diaper area and/or drool area in the crib (on
top of the sheet) etc. This saved lots of washing as well as
keeping nightime cribsheet changes to a minimum. Just change the
cloth as necessary. Your mileage may vary here. I am using cloth
diapers and wraps. In the first few weeks, they'll sleep through
just about anything even if the plumbing is going fulltime!
- Medicine dropper
I used this to give her a little water (1/4 tsp.) to wash down
her vitamins (She didn't like the taste or the texture...the syrup
was kind of thick). So, even though most liquid medicines come
with droppers, I found it was worth it to have one of my own.
Other items that I would consider stocking up on now are (these are
more for you and your spouse, but they might help):
- A scrap book/folder (I saved all the cards we got)
- photo album
- Film
- mail-order envelopes for photo finishing labs
- thank you notes
- stamps
- batteries for monitors, swings, etc.
- several weeks of dinners in the freezer (I didn't do this but
really wished I had)
These will help you stay organized in the 1st few hectic weeks and
it cuts down on errands.
|
818.39 | Things I needed when the baby came early... | STAR::LEWIS | | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:26 | 8 |
| And maybe:
- burp/spit up cloths
- ipecac -- you'll need it eventually
- as mentioned before, baby acetomeniphen (My sister the nurse
yelled at me for not having this)
- I bought two digital thermometers from Playschool (oral and
rectal). I have yet to use the rectal one.
|
818.40 | unless you WANT to spend money... | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:38 | 10 |
| I see no use for nail clippers at all - for anyone of any age - a good
pair of (regular "adult" size) manicure scissors allows a lot more
precision. I've said it before and I'll say it again - cut the baby's
nails when the baby is *asleep*!
Also, yes you do need *some* baby sox, but babies' feet are normally a
little chilly to the touch (ask your pedi); you don't need to try to
warm them up to your own palm temperature.
Leslie
|
818.41 | my list | SHALOT::KOPELIC | Quality is never an accident . . . | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:52 | 36 |
|
If your baby takes a pacifier, one of those Paci-clips came in real
handy when they're in the car seat, stroller, etc. Saved that pacifier
from alot of falls to the ground.
I agree with the nail scissors instead of clippers - that was our
pedi's recommendation.
small bibs - alot easier to change after spit-ups than an entire
outfit!
Make sure to get cornstarch powder and NOT regular baby powder (which
can accumulate in their lungs.)
My pedi recommended glycerin suppositories, baby tylenol, mylicon
drops, vaseline (will need if temperature taken rectally), and
a thermometer for the medicine cabinet. I've used all of them at
least once (after consulting with physician)
cloth diapers for cleaning up spit-ups, etc.
night-light bright enough to see the baby in the dark
my pedi recommended bathing with anti-bacterial soap the first month
(we used liquid dial for the first 3 mos because my husband had bought
such a large supply ;-)
super-absorbant sanitary napkins for yourself
stamps and thank you notes/birth announcements
I'll let you know if I think of anything else.
Bev
|
818.42 | | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Aug 13 1991 17:25 | 26 |
| Cornstarch baby powder
Desitin
small pacifiers (Mini-mam is good) if you think the baby may be smallish
plastic coated baby spoons for feeding
baby bath and baby shampoo
For this I suggest getting trial-size bottles with flip caps and
refilling them from larger ones. MUCH easier to handle w/ one hand
plus you can float them in the bath water and warm them up.
toy-holder/paci-clips
BABY BOOTIES!!!!!!!!!!! MILLIONS OF THEM!!!!!!! (-: (-: We must've
had at least a dozen pair and could never keep them clean enough!!
Also, may I suggest using the same color (or 2 colors) so there's less
to 'match'.
The rest of the stuff we used 'adult things'. No big difference
between adult face clothes/towels and baby's.
We always have done our laundry in Surf. For everyone. Never bothered
anyone.
Good Luck!! It's mostly hype, so if you THINK you need something,
perhaps suggest it as a shower gift or get a 'small one'. I do wish I
had gotten a diaper-wipe warmer ...
Patty
|
818.43 | my list, from experience | JAWS::TRIPP | | Wed Aug 14 1991 11:56 | 29 |
| My contribution to the "small" subject...
As a variation on the Qtips with alcohol I bought (actually the
hospital gave me) a box of alcohol wipes, the ones like the doctors use
before giving an injection, to clean the cord. They can be purchased
in most drugstores, usually in the pharmacy area. I just like the
idea, kind of like a mini washcloth.
For all those little items I bought a "little" plastic laundry basket.
You know the ones sold in the dime stores that are shaped like a
miniature bucket or basket, perhaps 8" x 10" x 3" deep. This was great
for holding the powder, lotion, thermometer, I also obtained from my
pharmacy a 3 and 5cc syringe, without needle of course, for dispensing
liquid medicine. (5cc's = one teaspoon, FYI). I felt more comfortable
knowing I had measured the medicine accurately. The other ones seemed
to allow some medicine to stick to the bottom or sides. A 10cc syringe
is also sold in the drugstore, usually on the rack with pill keepers
and such. I also found, made by First Years, a tiny bottle with a
nipple on it for giving medicine. I might have held a couple
teaspoons.
I covered his changing table with a terry cover with elastic covers,
but I also kept this covered with a plastic backed quilted lap pad.
Many times I would have a mess following a diaper change, but only had
to wash the pad. Couldn't have enough of these. I also got a few
sample size bottles of Keri lotion to add to the bath water. This came
from a pediatric nurse during one of his many hospital stays.
Lyn
|
818.44 | About wipe warmers and thermometers | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital is not thriving on chaos. | Thu Aug 15 1991 00:52 | 13 |
| >I do wish I had gotten a diaper-wipe warmer ...
We did, and use it to hold a container of warm water since we use
washcloths instead of baby wipes. After almost 19 months, it's still going
strong. A very good gift.
Re thermometers -- We've never owned a rectal thermometer. Our pedi takes
babies' temperature under the arm, and we followed suit. Certainly more
pleasant for the baby, and lots less hassle for Mom and/or Dad. It may not
be as accurate, but pinpoint accuracy isn't really necessary.
FWIW,
Steve
|
818.45 | | RAVEN1::HEFFELFINGER | Vini, vidi, visa | Thu Aug 15 1991 09:34 | 12 |
| We always take the temp under the arm too.
Now I'm glad we do. You see, our 2 year old daughter Katie is apparently
a budding doctor. She has a toy doctor kit with a thermometer in it. She is
forever sticking it or a pen or something of similar shape under my arm and
saying "you not feel good? Take a tempachur?"
I shudder to think what she'd be trying to do if we had taken her temp
rectally.... :-)
Tracey
|
818.46 | good lord, what won't they think of next | TLE::RANDALL | | Thu Aug 15 1991 15:47 | 3 |
| A diaper wipe warmer????????
--bonnie
|
818.47 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | | Thu Aug 15 1991 15:48 | 7 |
| -few
and to think we kept the plastic box on the shelf atop the radiator.
-sandy
|
818.48 | And Don't Forget.. | CAPITN::TOWERS_MI | | Thu Aug 15 1991 19:04 | 13 |
| Don't forget to have some pedialyte and syrup of ipecac on hand too.
We waited until the first major diarhea session and were on vacation.
Had to go to 4 stores before I found some Pedi. Now I take a bottle or
two with me unless I know I will be near a large supermarket. I
thought all pharmacies would carry it and when I did find it in the
small town were were in, I had to buy a case of bottles (at $17). By
that time I did not care
Keep the ipecac in case. Even with tiny ones you never know and it
last a long time. That way if an emergency occurs and your are told to
use it, you do not have to go and look for some.
Michelle
|
818.49 | .02c worth, literaly. | SHIPS::GORE_I | Bar sinister with pedant rampant | Tue Aug 20 1991 11:32 | 19 |
|
re -1
> Don't forget to have some pedialyte and syrup of ipecac on hand too.
^^^^^^^^^
I'm assuming that this is similar to Dioralyte (sp?) sold in the UK
for sickness and diarrhoea, and at a horrible price. It consists of
salt, potassium chloride (low sodium salt substitute), glucose and
sodium bicarbonate. Put another way, the packaging costs more than the
contents! I asked my GP if he could shed any light on this. It turns
out that for years doctors would recommend a pinch each of salt and
sugar in a pint of water. It was known that this enabled the body to
absorb the water much quicker, but noone knew why. Eventualy the
mechanism was worked out and the drugs manufacturers leaped on the band
wagon!
Sorry for the diversion, it just annoys me how some products are
sold/marketed.
Ian G.
|
818.50 | three kids, never used it | TLE::RANDALL | | Wed Aug 21 1991 16:34 | 4 |
| My third kid is rapidly approaching two, and I've never used
Pedialyte or any other similar product.
--bonnie
|
818.51 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:09 | 7 |
| Well, my oldest had a real bad case of the flu when he was nine months
old. He was down to drinking Pedialyte from an eye dropper every ten
minutes. It was a life saver for me, but as my mom used - unjelled
jello also works well in a pinch.
-sandy
|
818.52 | How'd you do it??? | JAWS::TRIPP | | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:23 | 24 |
| Bonnie, how did you ever survive almost TWO full years and not need
pedialyte???? Either you've got a home remedy you should share with
us, or you've got an exceptionally healthy child who has never had
vomiting or intestinal bugs....please share!
I used to buy Pedialyte in 8 ounce nursing type bottles, the same thing
the hospital uses at Lincoln Discount Drug in Westboro. It seemed a
little costly, but about the second or third time you run out and pay
convienience store prices for the stuff, and end up throwing half of it
away, since kids recover so quickly, it was cheaper in the long run. I
think there were 6 or 8 bottles per pack.
Although I must admit I did have a charmed life, since with each
hospitalization I was able to take a pack or two home. The nursing staff
would keep some in his room, and the hospital rules say that if something
goes into a patient's room it's considered "contaminated" and can't be put
back into their supply closet, so either I'd take it home or it would be
disposed of.
Now that he's older I routinely keep a bottle of Gaterade on the shelf
for those "just in case" situations, I have a pet peeve about paying
"convienience store prices", when a little planning ahead could save me
much money!
Lyn
|
818.53 | 6 1/2 years, not a drop of Pedialyte | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:30 | 3 |
| So far, *I* think the electrolyte biz is a license to print money...
Leslie
|
818.54 | I don't even know what it is! (Pedialyte) | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Thu Aug 22 1991 06:07 | 7 |
| My kids are 10 and 13 and I've never had occassion to use any such thing.
I've always used nail clippers except when the kids were babies. My baby book
suggested biting their nails off. I am not coordinated enough to use scissors
in my left hand.
ccb
|
818.55 | water | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Thu Aug 22 1991 10:12 | 11 |
| re: Pedialyte
Not almost two years, almost 18 years -- the oldest is 17.
For diarrhea I use water. Plain old water. None of the kids has
ever had a problem with loss of salts etc. For stomach flu,
abstinence followed by water and saltines, or unjelled jello.
None of my pediatricians has ever suggested anything else, either.
--bonnie
|
818.56 | Juli HATES Pedialite ... | CALS::JENSEN | | Thu Aug 22 1991 10:42 | 14 |
|
My Pedi recommended Pedialite ... except Juli would have NOTHING to do with it!
She hated it! (Not sure why?)
Pedi then recommended Gatorade (seemed sweet to me!) or very flat gingerale
or coke. Well, Juli prefers the flat gingerale (which we always have on hand
anyways).
With Pedialite, you have to use it within a very short amount of time ...
yes!, this stuff spoils once opened! Not to mention it's not cheap, either!
After 24 hours of gingerale, we added unsalted saltines, jar of baby rice
cereal, smashed banana, liquid foods (broth, etc.), unbuttered toast
and then worked upwards to normal food again.
|
818.57 | There's Alternatives? Great | CAPITN::TOWERS_MI | | Mon Aug 26 1991 13:24 | 10 |
| Since my little one is almost a year and we had a bad bout of diarrhea
in May I had not heard of any other cheap remedies. Thanks for the
info and I will keekp those in mind. So far pedialite has worked and
at the time, on vacation, the expense seemed minimal compared with him
pooping all over the place and looking miserable. If gingerale or
gatorade can work too that is great. Will give it a try should I have
to.
Michelle
|
818.58 | Sugar? | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Mon Aug 26 1991 15:56 | 8 |
| I don't know what Pedialyte has for a sweetener, but I do know that my
Dr. cautioned against using drinks that had a lot of sugar. They said
pedialyte, maybe gatorade, and that's IT. Anything else had so much
sugar and that amount of sugar tended to irritate the intestines, and
also provided a better home for the virus ... might want to check into
it!
Patty
|
818.59 | Emetrol...real sugary! | JAWS::TRIPP | | Mon Aug 26 1991 16:08 | 13 |
| OK lable readers, I can't remember what, if any kind of sugar is in
Pedialyte. I know for sure there is sugar in Gaterade. My educated
guess is some kind of glucose.
You want sugar, as it relates to cures for stomach upsets, try reading
EMETROL, that stuff is literally like syrup it's got so much sugar in
it! Unfortunately that the only thing my OB would allow me to take for
morning sickness, and it was so sweet it made me sicker!!
Emetrol is supposed to be a good cure for children's stomach upsets,
but for me it's like the cure is worse than the disease!
Lyn
|