Back to Sleep and Tummy to Play

Those of you who know me well will be tired of me constantly banging on about the benefits of putting a baby on his/her tummy.  However, Peter Walker (who trained me in Baby Massage teaching) has just sent the following through and I felt it worth sharing!

Research from America followed 350 babies from birth to walking. This showed that babies who spend time on their tummies are able to roll over, sit up, creep, crawl and pull themselves up to standing significantly earlier than babies who remain on their backs.

The AAP (American Academy of Pediatrics) now recommends that babies sleep on their backs but spend wakeful time on their tummies. “Back to Sleep and Tummy to Play” is their message.

The five reasons they give for encouraging babies to spend waking time on their tummies are;

1. It helps strengthen the baby’s neck, back and trunk muscles.
Babies need strong muscle groups in order to sit, crawl and walk.

2. Tummy time will help avoid flathead syndrome known as positional plagiocephaly

3. Babies who spend time on their tummies explore their world by rotating their head and rotating their bodies in different positions. This may ultimately help with cognitive development.

4. Tummy time assists visual development as the baby learns to track movement and focus on objects.

5. Babies who spend time on their tummies are less likely to develop torticollis whereby the neck muscles tighten and pull the head in a specific direction.

Here’s some other good reasons why babies should spend time on their tummies.

1. Lifting up from the floor in this way stretches open the baby’s chest allowing the baby to breathe deeper and take more oxygen for less effort. Improved functioning for both the baby’s lungs and heart.

2. Simultaneously while lifting up from the floor the baby stretches and relaxes their tummy to improve the baby’s digestive rhythm as well as their general disposition.

3. Making ‘friends with gravity’ in early infancy plants the seeds of good posture for later adult life.
It gives strength to the muscles that lift the spine and pull the shoulders back,
a strength that the baby cannot obtain in any other natural phase of their development.