| Calming For Baby and Mother!
Baby Calm is a blend of natural essential oils that are calming for both baby and mother. This mild essential oil blend is a sweet smelling oil that is designed to calm and settle. Developed to soothe and comfort fussy babies.
Use when baby is restless and unsettled. Use for those times when you’ve met all the normal needs and baby is just not quite satisfied and you don’t know why. Can be used when baby is teething and is having a long night. Can be used on big babies too!!
When baby feels good the whole family feels good.
Benefits of Massaging your Baby with Baby Calm
Studies have shown that massaging your
baby will reduce stress hormones in you and your child. The growth and
development of preterm newborn infants can be facilitated by
tactile-kinesthetic stimulation (massage). Greater weight gain and
superior performance on developmental assessments persisted across the
first six months for the group of infants that received the massage
treatment.
Massaging your baby is also a good way to bond with her. The imperial college in London reports that a mother with postnatal depression can have significantly better interaction with her baby and significantly less depression, simply by learning to massage her infant.
New research by a team at the University of Warwick says
that massage may help infants aged under six months sleep
better, cry less and be less stressed.
The team of researchers from Warwick Medical School and
the Institute of Education at the University of Warwick
was led by Angela Underdown. They looked at nine studies
of massage of young children covering a total of 598 infants
aged under six months. They found the various studies showed
a range of significant results including indications that
infants who were massaged cried less, slept better, and
had lower levels of stress hormones such as cortisol compared
to infants who did not receive massage. One of the studies
examined also claimed that massage could affect the release
of the hormone melatonin.
One study also provided evidence that massage could help
build better relationships between infants and mothers who
had postnatal depression, although the reviewers said more
research is needed to confirm this effect. One other study
indicated that massage, eye contact and talking had a significant
effect on growth and a significant reduction in illnesses
and clinic visits for infants receiving little tactile stimulation
in an orphanage but this was an unusual set of circumstances
and the other studies, where infants were receiving normal
levels of tactile stimulation, found no effect on growth.
For external use only.
This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. |