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Helpful Tips When Changing Your Baby's
Diapers
For Girls: Never wipe from the rectum
forward, as it brings fecal bacteria into the urethra and
vaginal area. Instead, wipe front-to-back (just as girls and
women do after using the toilet to prevent bladder infections).
Also, separate the labia and cleanse lightly to remove all
matter. Do not scrub.
For Boys: Plan to get squirted (and
that he will wet his own clothes and maybe even squirt himself
in the face) occasionally. (What the heck, plan for it every
time, then be pleased when the loaded pistol doesn't go off.)
When you get proficient at diapering, you'll be able to hold a
wad of toilet tissue or a clean diaper over his penis while
washing/drying with the other hand.
It's only water, it's not very much, really, and it's
sterile when it first comes out, so laugh about it! Some
parents prefer to point the penis down as they put on a new
diaper. Otherwise, boys pee up and it may go out the top of the
diaper, which often gaps at his waist (or what would be his
waist, if he wasn't so chubby and actually could bend in the
middle and sit up). Also, pointing the penis down until the
umbilical cord falls off is one more step to ensure that the
cord remains dry.
Make sure to clean under the scrotum, where fecal matter may
hide. If your baby boy has not been circumcised, the foreskin
does not yet retract. Don't try to make it do so - just wash it
with the cotton pad.
If the newborn has just been circumcised, you probably
received instruction in circumcision care. Some procedures
involve a plastic ring that gets no special care, or a dab of
petroleum jelly or antibiotic ointment. Other procedures
involve a gauze pad that will need to be removed at each diaper
change. Dab at the circumcision with a clean, wet cotton ball.
You may have been instructed to apply petroleum jelly to the
wound or to a new gauze pad, then re-wrap the wound. (Look for
discharge or odor and call the doctor if it appears to be
infected.)
Cloth Diaper Changing Tips:
Very few parents still use cloth diapers but if you're one
of them, here are a few pointers...
1. Traditional cloth diapers need pins (or diaper covers).
Keep them stuck in a bar of soap and they'll slide through the
cloth more easily.
2. Put two fingers of your left hand (if you're
right-handed) between the diaper and the baby so if the pin
sticks someone, it's you.
3. Beware of the possibility of pins unpinning and sticking
your baby. Make sure you're not using a "kite" fold that has a
pin in the middle over the genital area or stomach, which could
be damaged by a loose pin. (This should not happen, however, if
you are using diaper pins - not safety pins - that have a
safety latch.)
4. If the cloth diapers you bought or were given are not
pre-folded, but rather the large rectangles, you have several
options for how to fold them of your choice.
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