THE POTTY BOOT CAMP: Basic Training For Toddlers

October 31, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

THE POTTY BOOT CAMP: Basic Training For Toddlers

  • ISBN13: 9781601455192
  • Condition: USED – Very Good
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

The Potty Boot Camp: Basic Training for Toddlers is a unique new toilet training method developed by Dr. Suzanne Riffel. The Potty Boot Camp works for nearly every child because is combines the most successful and enduring toilet training techniques.

Rating: (out of 28 reviews)

List Price: $ 11.95

Price: $ 10.69

BabyBjorn Potty Chair – Blue

October 31, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

BabyBjorn Potty Chair – Blue Top Deals
A new ergonomic design gives the BABYBJÖRN® Potty Chair softer forms and lots of leg room so your child gets closer to the inner potty. The BABYBJÖRN® Potty Chair fast becomes any child’s “favorite chair”, where they are happy to sit as long as necessary.

Albee Baby
$ 22.99
+ $ 4.95 shipping
Diapers.com
$ 23.49
+ $ 0.00 shipping

Top 3 Toddler Bedding Sets For Toddlers

October 30, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

Top 3 Toddler Bedding Sets For Toddlers

Are you looking for a cute bedding set for your girl or boy toddler’s bedroom that they will love and enjoy cuddling up in at night?  Thankfully there are many choices of toddler bedding sets for girls and boys on the market today.

The kind of bedding you choose will entirely depend on a couple of things such as if your child has a favorite character, if you want colors to match the existing room decor or if you would rather have a solid color bedding.  The following are the top three choices for toddler bedding:

Toy Story Toddler Bedding

Since the release of Toy Story 3 there has been an increase in Toy Story products including the toddler bedding sets. Their adventures over the years has been great to watch for both the adults and the toddlers.  Now you can have these favorite characters in a bedding set.  There are quite a few different styles that include Woody, Buzz, Jessie, Rex and Ham on different theme adventures.  You can also get just the sheet sets.

Elmo Toddler Bedding

Elmo has been a favorite character of the young for a long time now.  You will be able to find toddler bedding sets for girls and boys in toddler size, twin and double.  You will also find a lot of room decor to accent the rest of the room.

Tinkerbell Toddler Bedding

This favorite little blonde pixie has young toddlers looking for a lot of Tinkerbell accessories including the bedding sets.  You will find a great selection to choose from as there are nice pastel colors from purples to pinks and yellow.  Tinkerbell has been a favorite character amongst the young for a long time as she probably will for years to come.

Toddler bedding is really fun to look over and pick out for your little ones.  Toy Story toddler bedding, Elmo toddler bedding and the Tinkerbell toddler bedding is just a few of the selections you will find for your toddlers.

Have you received a quilt/blanket from Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital’s program, “Blankets for Babies”?

October 30, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Newborn

Question by quilter24: Have you received a quilt/blanket from Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital’s program, “Blankets for Babies”?
Blankets for Babies provides quilts/blankets for premature babies and their families at Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital and surrounding hospitals in the Bay Area. Were the quilts given to families in the neo-intensive care unit or used more as wall hangings?

Best answer:

Answer by Doodlestuff
The best way to find out is to ask. The hospital auxiliary probably is your best start.

I understand the problem. I knew 3 children who had cancer and none received blankets despite claims that ‘local need’ was served first’ with one popular charity. I no longer donate anything to that charity but instead, add my blankets with a church group (I don’t belong to them) and they get them to the children’s hospital.

Give your answer to this question below!

Weird Potty Training for Public Toilets Japanese video

October 30, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

Weird Japanese Potty Training series
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Ditching Diapers – Potty Training Problems, Trends and Suggestions

October 29, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

Ditching Diapers – Potty Training Problems, Trends and Suggestions

While researching potty training, and the elimination of disposable diapers from a child’s life, the author has come across several recent trends. The most disturbing trend is that children have gone from being potty-trained at around 18 months on average in the 1960s, to taking, on average, 30 months today.  It appears that this is expanding.  Three years ago, Pampers introduced Size 7 diapers to the marketplace (something that no other manufacturer has followed), but a recent review of the Pampers.com website found that Pampers is now calling some of their largest diapers (disposable training pants and disposable underwear) “Size 8″.  Another alarming recent article, purportedly from the U.K. discussed how children were remaining in diapers until school age.  It went on to say, school teachers were changing children in Kindergarten.  This article blamed time constraints on the family, and that many day care workers were putting children into diapers while at their day care center for “convenience” reasons, which effectively undermined any of the potty-training efforts the parents had done.  I question the validity of this article (especially about children going to elementary school without being potty-trained), so there is no mention of a link to it, but its ramifications, as I prepare to bring triplets into this world, are profound.  Even if this article is not true, some of the issues, especially day cares undermining the consistency efforts of parents with potty training are probably issues that many parents of children in today’s busy world will face.

The average baby in the United States uses 3,500 diapers per year (roughly 9 diaper changes per day).  This is an average, and because of normal diaper changes, sizes, etc. the average baby uses many more diapers their first year, then their second and so forth.  However, if a child stays in diapers for just one extra year, that is at least an extra 68 per child (based on the average prices of size 5, 6 and 7 diapers at .40 / diaper).  As the future parent of triplets, this means that my costs, per year, escalate to well over 00.   Therefore, the economic incentives alone are well worth investing time and thoughts on the subject, even though my family is unborn.

There are many factors that point to why our children are remaining in diapers longer.   Some blame parents for lack of consistency and time.  Others say day cares and other help we have to reach out for to make ends meet undermine our potty-training efforts by putting children back in diapers for their own convenience.  Others blame physicians who recommend letting the child “choose” when to ditch diapers. 

The culprit probably lies somewhere within and as a combination of most of these suggestions.  However, one of the most obvious factors that others are not discussing is that of children using disposable training pants that look, feel and protect like a diaper.  An example, as a child, the author’s brother was eight years younger than he was, and he still remembers his brother going through potty training.   At the time, training pants were entirely cloth, and resembled very thick underwear, and accidents were obvious, messy for everyone and created clear discomfort for the child.  After several accidents, the author’s brother was potty-trained quickly, but the clean-up and the extra work surrounding using underwear as training pants put a strain on the mother, and the potty-training process started and stopped repeatedly for several months.  Soon after the author’s brother was potty-trained, Huggies introduced Pull-Ups. 

Pull-Ups provided a great advantage for the parent, and for the child.  They still looked, felt-like and resembled underwear, but they contained accidents much better, resulting in less time.  This was also when diapers were generally a solid color, were plastic-backed, had tapes on them (instead of Velcro).  Pull-ups on the other hand felt like cloth, had cartoon characters on them, and the child pulled them up, instead of the parent putting the child in them.  Soon after though, diapers changed and they started making them with a cloth-like cover, Velcro tapes, and featured cartoonish designs.  The problem with this, in the author’s opinion, is that these improvements in the diaper removed the advantage for the child – that of wearing “big boy” pants.  The only real difference between diapers and disposable training pants (as far as the author can tell) is that the child pulls them up, even though they look, feel and protect like a diaper.  Another problem with this was the release of “convertible style” diapers which are no longer available for sale.  These diapers were pulled up (supposedly by the parent), and this left little distinction, if any, between the supposedly special training pant, and the diaper.  The diaper companies soon stopped making these diapers, but for them to put this type of diaper into the marketplace, knowing that they are identical to pull-ups in almost every aspect seems like flawed logic.  Are they deliberately trying to keep our children in diapers longer?   Probably, its good business, they sell more products, but fully fleshing this argument removes the blameworthiness from the parent, and puts it on an intangible corporation, something that should not be encouraged.   Even if they are doing this deliberately, it is up to the parent to take matters into their own hands.  If these products did not sell, the company would stop making them, if we keep buying them, then they have every incentive to keep producing it.  

The point with this diatribe is essentially that if you are going to try and get your child to use the potty, introducing pants to wear instead of diapers, that look, feel and do the same job as diapers – are just diapers to the child and the child sees no difference.  If you are motivating your child to get out of diapers, why then would you put them in something that is nearly identical?  

The convenience of disposable underwear is a huge bonus, but the problem still exists for the child – they are still wearing diapers, even though they are being told they are not.  Unfortunately, this might be a large contributing factor to why children have such difficulties with potty training now.   Couple this with the frantic schedule everyone leads, which diminishes the time available to be consistent with a child, and it is easy to see why it might take longer to potty train a kid. 

As for the author’s children, well, unless something changes, we will try to put them in cloth, traditional training pants.  There will be messes, but putting them back in diapers, regardless of how many times we tell them they are not “diapers” does not seem like it will achieve the desired results.  A key problem with this exists though, and if day care workers are undermining potty training efforts with pull-ups, then how will they act when a child has an accident in underwear?  At least we would have a chance with a pull-up though.  Unfortunately, I do not have the answers at this point, but I know what I will try to do in the future.  We have two years before we jump off this bridge, but with triplets, my personal goal is to eliminate diapers, and the massive expense that goes along with this as soon as possible.   Maybe we will just take a week off from work and try one of those potty-training boot camps, but from what I know, potty-training is a long, difficult process, where consistency is the paramount key.  Switching from diapers, and maintaining a diaper-free existence for the child should achieve success…   I hope.

Intelligent Mommy provides diaper-pricing calculators online and on your cell phone, along with other tools, communities and forums to help mothers save on the things that babies use the most.  Visit us at www.intelligentmommy.com for more information.  

what is the normal temp range for a premie?

October 29, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Newborn

Question by preemie mama: what is the normal temp range for a premie?
her adjusted age is 6 months and she has a rectal temp of 38.7 degrees and her axillary temp is 38.5. I know she has a fever but would like to know the normal range?

Best answer:

Answer by Angelseye
I would say everything between 36.5 and 38.0 is ok!

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Baby Beds and Cribs, OOAK Custom Dollhouse Miniature Furniture by Deb Roberts of Deb’s Minis

October 29, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

The wee ones need a special place to sleep and dream too! These are some of the baby beds, cribs, toddler and youth beds that I dress for dollhouses and room boxes. Custom orders accepted, see more at www.debsminis.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Hooked on Phonics: Discover Reading – Toddler Edition

October 29, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

Hooked on Phonics: Discover Reading – Toddler Edition

  • Comprehensive program that encourages:
  • Imagination and concept development
  • Rhyming and word-sound association
  • Vocabulary development
  • for ages 18-36 months

Hooked on Phonics: Discover Reading – Toddler Edition is the second building block in teaching a child to read. This program, geared for ages 18 months to 36 months, makes reading interactive by asking questions while looking at pictures and fosters

Rating: (out of 4 reviews)

List Price: $ 64.99

Price: $ 20.99

Safety 1st Secure Top Bed Rail, Beige

October 28, 2010 :: Posted by - :: Category - Toddler

Safety 1st Secure Top Bed Rail, Beige

  • Top of mattress attachment to eliminate possible entrapment issue between mattress and bedrail
  • Secure tech logo is a visual indicator that lets you know bed rail is secured properly
  • Panel folds down to allow for easy bed making
  • SofTech foam on bottom rails provides added comfort for the child
  • 15″ above mattress height provides extra security

The Safety 1st Secure Top Bed Rail secures to the top of the mattress for 15″ of total protection. Constructed to eliminate possible entrapment issues between the mattress and the bedrail. The panel folds down which allows for easy bed making and a v

Rating: (out of 7 reviews)

List Price: $ 34.99

Price: $ 33.50

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