Bathing
You may bathe your baby daily, but for the first few months, 2 or
3 times a week is often enough for a full bath. Clean your baby's
drools and spills as they happen and keep the face, hands and
diaper area clean.
Keep the bath water level below the naval or give sponge baths
until a few days after the navel cord has fallen off. Submerging
the cord could cause infection or interfere with its drying out
and falling off. Getting the cord a little wet doesn't matter.
Use tap water without any soap or with a nondrying baby soap.
Don't forget to wash the face and neck; otherwise, chemicals from
dribbled milk and food can build up and cause an irritated rash.
Also rinse off the eyelids with water.
Don't forget to wash the genital area. However, when you wash the
inside of the female genital area (the vulva), never use soap.
Rinse the area with plain water and wipe from front to back to
prevent irritation. This practice and the avoidance of any bubble
baths before puberty may prevent many urinary tract infections and
vaginal irritations. At the end of the bath, rinse your baby well;
soap residue can be irritating.
Changing Diapers
After you remove a wet diaper, just rinse your baby's bottom off
with a wet washcloth or diaper wipe. After soiled diapers, rinse
the bottom under running warm water or in a basin of warm water.
You can't clean BMs off the skin with diaper wipes alone. Millions
of bacteria will remain and cause diaper rashes. After you clean
the rear, cleanse the genital area by wiping front to back with a
wet cloth. In boys, stool can hide under the scrotum, so rinse
carefully there. If you have a girl, carefully clean the creases
of the vaginal lips (labia).
Shampoo
Wash your baby's hair once or twice a week with a special baby
shampoo that doesn't sting the eyes. Don't be concerned about
hurting the anterior fontanelle (soft spot on the head). It is
well protected.
Lotions, Ointments, and Powder
Newborn skin normally does not require any ointments or creams.
Especially avoid putting any oil, ointment, or greasy substance on
your baby's skin because this will almost always block the small
sweat glands and lead to pimples or a heat rash. If the skin
starts to become dry and cracked, use a baby lotion, hand lotion,
or moisturizing cream twice a day. Apply it within 3 minutes after
a bath to keep moisture in the skin.
Cornstarch powder can be helpful for preventing rashes in areas of
friction. Avoid talcum powder because it can cause a serious
chemical pneumonia if inhaled into the lungs.
Umbilical Cord
Try to keep the cord dry. Put rubbing alcohol on the base of the
cord (where it attaches to the skin) twice a day (including after
the bath) until 1 week after it falls off. Although using alcohol
can delay the separation of the cord by 1 or 2 days, it does
prevent cord infections, and that's what is most important. Air
exposure helps the cord stay dry and eventually fall off, so keep
diapers folded down below the cord area. If you are using
disposable diapers, you can cut a wedge out of the diaper scissors
so the cord is not covered.
Fingernails and Toenails
Cut the toenails straight across to prevent ingrown toenails. When
you cut fingernails, round off the corners of the nails so your
baby doesn't scratch himself or others.
Trim the nails once a week after a bath, when the nails are
softened by the bath. Use clippers or special baby scissors. This
job usually takes two people unless you do it while your child is
asleep.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.