New book addresses children’s sleep issues


PTI, Nov 22, 2021, 5:58 PM IST

Image courtesy: Zurijeta/shutterstock

New Delhi: Blending traditional wisdom and the latest research, a new book ”Sleeping Like a Baby” released on Monday presents parents with a new approach to achieve longer naps and better night sleep for both caregiver and baby.

The book, published by Penguin Random House India (PRHI), is written by infant and child sleep specialist Himani Dalmia and journalist-author Neha Bhatt. The book’s foreword is written by professor James McKenna of the Mother-Baby Behavioural Sleep Laboratory.

Touted to be a ”ground-breaking book” in the parenting space, it serves as the ultimate bedside companion for parents, ”packed with all the modern tools you need to build a stronger connection with your children and enable age-appropriate sleep for their optimum growth”.

”Indian children are among the most sleep-deprived in the world: on average, they barely clock 8 hours of sleep a night instead of the prescribed 10–12 hours, besides naps for younger children.

”In ‘Sleeping Like a Baby’, we’ve tried to provide the answers to fix a broken system that puts tremendous pressure and stress on mothers, babies, caregivers to conform to unrealistic societal standards leading to disastrous physical and mental health consequences,” said Bhatt about the book.

With anecdotal insights, deep research and practical tips in an Indian context, it aims to empower parents to tune into their instincts and understand a child’s cues so that bedtime battles, cranky days and sleepless nights are a thing of the past.

Not a memoir or loosely argued expert opinion, the book, as per publishers, is packed with research while still being eminently readable and written at a high standard by two established writers.

According to Dalmia, so far there is ”not a single Indian book on baby sleep”, and none of the international baby sleep books come close to ”communicating the unique, humane, biologically normal and effective formula we had discovered and developed to help babies and families sleep better”. ”’Sleeping Like A Baby’ dives into research on baby sleep and presents several real-life case studies, giving parents the tools they need to tune into their instincts and their babies’ cues to navigate these choppy waters with confidence and joy,” she added.

Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.

Top News

Kumaraswamy and Shivakumar spar over sex scandal involving Hassan MP

SC questions ED on timing of Kejriwal’s arrest ahead of LS polls, seeks its reply

Revanna case: BJP launches counter-attack on Congress, questions delayed action by Karnataka govt

We don’t send dossiers on terror; ‘Bharat ghar mein ghus ke marta hai’: PM Modi

Cricket: India’s T20 World Cup squad announced

Soaring mercury in Kerala: Orange alert for Palakkad District

Mumbai court summons cricketer Prithvi Shaw over social media influencer’s complaint

Related Articles More

Why not detect sex of foetus, then protect girl child: IMA chief Asokan

Include 4 hrs of physical activity, 8 hrs sleep in routine for optimal health, suggests study

Traffic noise can increase risk of cardiovascular disease: Study

Nearsightedness is at epidemic levels – and the problem begins in childhood

Study finds genetic basis for link between depression, heart disease

MUST WATCH

Skin Rash, Causes, Signs and Symptoms

11 bullets found in python’s body!

K. Jayaprakash Hegde Sharing His Memories

Grafting Jack Anil

Heat Illness


Latest Additions

‘Shehzada’ dig: 3 generations of Nehru-Gandhi family sacrificed themselves for country, says Sharad Pawar

Rinku Singh a casualty of IPL’s ‘Impact Player’ rule: Report quotes BCCI source on T20 World Cup

Delhi cops question Youth Cong leader in MP’s Chhatarpur over fake video of Shah

Kumaraswamy and Shivakumar spar over sex scandal involving Hassan MP

Poor people have more children, why only Muslims are being targeted: Kharge asks PM

Thanks for visiting Udayavani

You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.