Newborn Sleep 101 (On-Demand)
$60.00
- Ideal For: Expectant parents and those with babies 0-3 months old.
- Duration: 1.5 hours
- Format: Pre-recorded video, available to watch for 60 days after your purchase. Handouts accompanying the material are included to support your learning and implementation.
What New Parents are Saying:
Good, realistic, practical tips
Main Line Family Education makes being a new parent less scary by offering the necessary tools to navigate this new adventure! This class offered good, realistic, practical tips to deal with newborn sleep issues.
Learned new approaches
We really enjoyed Newborn Sleep 101 and learned new approaches to helping our newborn fall and stay asleep. Erica was friendly and thorough in answering questions and the course material was very practical and approachable.
Appreciate the expertise
I truly appreciate the expertise Erica brought to the class. It is so much less anxiety provoking to learn from someone who can tell you what the AAP recommends but can also speak from experience and recognize that sometimes you have to do what is best for baby in the safest way possible.
About the Class:
Multi award-winning Pediatric Sleep Consultant Erica Desper covers all things newborn sleep: what “normal” newborn sleep looks like, how to help your baby sleep for longer stretches, solutions for soothing fussy babies, how sleep and schedules change over time, and how to nurture healthy sleep habits as your baby grows in order to prevent sleep issues. Erica also reviews some popular products out there on the market that “promise to make your baby sleep”.
This class is ideal for expectant parents who are nervous about losing sleep, and for new parents needing to sleep a little more.
Taught By:
Topics Covered:
- What normal newborn sleep looks like
- How to help your baby sleep for longer stretches
- Solutions for soothing fussy babies
- How sleep and schedules change over time
- How to nurture healthy sleep habits as your baby grows and prevent sleep issues
- Co–sleeping – Is it safe? Is it “wrong”? What does the AAP say?