Find » Health & Wellness » Environmental Sensitivity: Little K...

Environmental Sensitivity: Little Known Facts About Your Premature Baby

By Pam Gaulin, published Apr 13, 2007
Published Content: 1,808  Total Views: 3,307,224  Favorited By: 348 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.6 of 5
Premature babies are more sensitive to their environment than full-term babies.

Premature babies react more to changes in temperature, light, sound, scent and activity than full-term babies. Parents of premature babies usually tune into this sensitivity early on.Friends and family members, however, who spend less time with the baby, need some educating in this area.

A premature baby does not need to attend a baby shower. For some new mothers, there baby shower may actually be scheduled after the surprise birth of a premature baby. Attending family and friends somehow think the premature baby should be at the shower. At most baby showers, the baby may be present, but is not born yet.

A premature baby who may only be recently out of the hospital does not need to be around a whole group of people. When a preemie has too much stimulus, he or she will basically shut down.

This slight transition may only at first be recognizable by parents. The pre-term infant, when overstimulated will seem to "zone out" but not always fall asleep. The preemie will disengage from the activity. This is his or her way of saying that enough is enough.

Part of this may be caused by too many senses being stimulated at once. Too much stimulus, and the proximity of external stimulus both affect the preemie. When people get too close to the baby's face, this could also cause the preemie to shut down.

The other sensitivity that pre-term infants have may be unknown to family and friends, is to scent. Strong perfumes and fragrances can cause discomfort in the preemie. When heavy fragrances are worn around a preemie, he or she may show discomfort by crying.

Another environmental factor that premature infants show sensitivity to is sound. For pre-term babies who have passed their hearing test, they can be easily disturbed by sudden noises. At the same time, pre-term babies have grown accustomed to soothing white noise, after spending time in a NICU, where there is a low hum of activity.

Per-term children do respond well to white noise created by a fan, a humidifier, or a white noise machine.

Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 9 of 9
 
 
erdty

Posted on 12/14/2007 at 10:12:49 AM

 
This article brings back memories, our first baby weighed 2 pounds, 4 ounces and was 13 weeks premature. I can say that I witnesses most of these things in her short life, especially the scent issue. Her daddy and I were instructed by her doctor to be careful and not change any scents, such as shampoo, deoderant, perfume, aftershave, etc.

Posted on 04/23/2007 at 1:04:00 PM

 
Wonderful article with tons of great information.

Posted on 04/20/2007 at 8:04:00 AM

 
excellent information. people forget that babies are only able to handle so much...they think if they're "protecting" them, it'll all be ok!

Posted on 04/17/2007 at 7:04:00 AM

 
This is great information!

Posted on 04/16/2007 at 8:04:00 AM

 
I learned a lot from this article. Great article, thanks!

Posted on 04/14/2007 at 6:04:00 PM

 
Great information. A lot of well-meaning parents and relatives don't realize that all the fussing over the new baby can actually be doing harm. Good article.

Posted on 04/14/2007 at 1:04:00 PM

 
Great info, my youngest sister was a preemie, she weighed 2# at birth and was 2 months old before she came home, she went back to the hospital and didn't come home till she was 4 months old.

Posted on 04/13/2007 at 10:04:00 PM

 
Very important information! Great article!

Posted on 04/13/2007 at 5:04:00 PM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comments 1 - 9 of 9
 
Most Commented On