It is one of the most important things that every newborn has to have done at the hospital before they go home.
Hospital staff usually use ink and paper to create a record of the baby’s unique footprint. Most parents also use them as keepsakes in baby books, but in fact, they can actually do so much more.
Footprints may also be used for identification if a baby goes missing, if they are abducted or if they get separated from its parents in a natural disaster.
Now, McLaren Bay Region has a new technology which makes the practice easier, cleaner and longer-lasting.
“It’s nice that there’s no clean-up involved. So we can wrap that baby right back up and hand baby to mom,” said Lori Skrzysinski, who is the O.B. Unit manager at McLaren Bay Region’s Family BirthPlace.
The technology is known as CertaScan and it creates digital footprints in just a matter of seconds.
“It’s definitely more reliable, it’s a high definition footprint,” Skrzysinski said.
The Newborn Safety System was officially rolled out Sept. 14.
Other hospitals in the McLaren family to use CertaScan include Mt. Pleasant, Lansing as well as Petoskey.
Newborn baby Cobi and his mom Shaneequa can use the digital print for his baby book or something many parents don’t want to think about.
“We think it’s a forever gift that we can give our parents that this is a biometric marker that can be used for a lifetime for identification purposes,” Skrzysinski said. “Usually mom and dad get one set of footprints, but what’s nice about his new system is that they can access those footprints forever now.”
The digital footprint could also be used by police to positively identify a baby. “They can contact CertaScan and they’ll run the prints and be able to tell the police what hospital the baby was born at,” Skrzysinski said.
Cobi was one of 49 newborns who have already been scanned with the Newborn Safety System since McLaren Bay Region began using it.
Study Finds That Kids Who Use Touch Screens Sleep Less
Not so good news: Study finds that toddlers who use touch screen devices get less sleep
There has always been a lot of controversy about children and screen time – should they or shouldn’t they have screen time or how long should they be allowed to have access to a phone or tablet?
Now, a new study has found that toddlers who use such touch-screen devices, like tablets and cell phones, get less sleep as a result. The study was published in Science Reports whereby Researchers surveyed over 700 parents regarding their child’s sleep patterns as well as their use of touch-screen devices. The children in question were between the ages of 6 and 36 months of age.
The researchers had discovered a “significant association” between the frequency of touch-screen usage and the child’s sleep habits. Children who used tablets more frequently had a tougher time falling asleep, and they also logged fewer minutes of sleep overall when they were compared to children who did not use touch-screen devices, or who used them less frequently.
Ultimately, the researchers concluded that for each hour the toddlers used a tablet, they slept 15.6 fewer minutes. Wow. That’s a quite a strong link between touch-screen use and a child’s sleep habits.
We know that sleep is essential for any child’s growing brain and body (not to mention, their mood), so this research is really important for us parents. While many of us rely on touch-screen devices to help children get through long car rides or to occupy them at restaurants, this study now indicates that our little ones could be paying the price at bedtime. But why is it that touch-screen devices are so bad for our kids’ sleep time?
Researchers have a number of different theories. First, it could be that kids simply have less time to sleep if they are playing on their tablets. After all, who wants to go to sleep when they could actually be playing “Peppa Pig” on watching You Tube videos?
Second of all, the content of the media on the touch screens may keep the kids awake. Playing an exciting video game before bed time may make it more difficult for kiddos to doze off, and the moving images, as well as the flashing lights may also make it more difficult to close those eyes.
A third theory is that the blue light from the screen could very well be throwing off kids’ circadian rhythm. Past research has shown that the blue light emitted from the screens on smartphones, laptops as well as tablets, can interfere with the body’s natural circadian rhythms and suppress the production of melatonin, the hormone that helps to regulate our sleep, in our brains.
So, if you want your little ones to fall asleep quicker and stay asleep longer, limit their use of touch-screen devices, especially as it starts to get dark outside. Instead, read to them or play games, sing songs or try other calming activities that will help your kids to slow down and get into a relaxing mood.
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