This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Cart

3 Reasons Your Baby Needs Good Day Naps

Posted by Karen Faulkner on
day naps, baby sleep, sleep and settling, cat naps, catnapping, short day naps, online sleep program, Nurture Sleep Program, reflux, unsettled baby

Catnapping

Catnapping is something that frustrates many mums. A catnap is a short nap, anything from 20-40 minutes. For babies, under 3-4 months of age, a cat nap can be a normal phenomenon.

https://nurtureparenting.com.au/baby-sleep-and-catnapping/

Until they are 4 months old babies do not secrete melatonin, which is the neurotransmitter responsible for getting babies to sleep and keeping them asleep.

https://nurtureparenting.com.au/7-things-need-know-baby-sleep-naps/

1. Napping and memory

Short bursts of sleep or day naps are actually really useful because napping improves memory.

Trials with 216 babies up to 12 months old indicated they were unable to remember new tasks if they did not have a lengthy sleep soon afterwards. The University of Sheffield team suggested the best time to learn may be just before sleep and emphasised the importance of reading at bedtime. The results, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, showed "sleeping like a baby" was vital for learning.

Dr Jane Herbert, from the department of psychology at the University of Sheffield, said, "Those who sleep after learning, learn well, those not sleeping don't learn at all."She said it had been assumed that "wide-awake was best" for learning, but instead it "may be the events just before sleep that are most important".http://www.bbc.com/news/health-30776745

And the findings showed "just how valuable" reading books with children before sleep could be.Dr Herbert added: "Parents get loads of advice, some saying fixed sleep, some flexible, these findings suggest some flexibility would be useful, but they don't say what parents should do."

day naps

2. Napping and learning

Napping helps with learning - getting your baby napping can improve learning.

In an American study, researchers discovered a nap appeared to help three-to-five-year-olds better remember pre-school lessons.

University of Massachusetts Amherst researchers studied 40 youngsters and report their findings in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The benefit persisted in the afternoon after a nap and into the next day.

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2013/09/naps-nurture-growing-brains

The study authors say their results suggest naps are critical for memory consolidation and early learning. The researchers hadn’t kept track of overnight sleep, but it was apparent that even if a child caught up a bit at night, that didn’t provide a memory boost. “This is really saying, they need that sleep close to learning” for it to take root,

http://www.bbc.com/news/health-24202591

day naps

3. Improves brain function

It heightens brain function during the day

Taking a nap also helps to clear information out of your brain’s temporary storage areas, getting it ready for new information to be absorbed.

A study from the University of California asked participants to complete a challenging task around midday, which required them to take in a lot of new information. At around 2 pm, half of the volunteers took a nap while the rest stayed awake.

The really interesting part of this study is (at 6 pm that night) the napping group performed better than those who didn’t take a nap. In fact, the napping group actually performed better than they had earlier in the morning.

Very young children take naps because so-called sleep pressure builds rapidly in their brains — that is, the need for sleep accumulates so quickly during waking hours that a nap becomes a biological necessity. It is not just a question of how much total sleep children need in 24 hours. Possibly because of the intense synaptic activity going on in their highly active, highly connected brains, young children are less able to tolerate long periods of time awake.

And if you’re battling with getting your little one to sleep then... You need to know about my NEWLY launched online #nurturesleepprogram 

You can get the know-how and ongoing support you need.

You can access my 3 decades of experience as a registered midwife and child and family health nurse via the Nurture Sleep Program.

You can take your baby from sleepless to slumber in up to 7 easy lessons across 3 age groups once you join the program.

https://nurtureparenting.com.au/nurture-sleep-program/

? FOODS that promote baby sleep
⏰ ROUTINE: easy, flexible, sleep-ready
? ENVIRONMENT: getting it right
?? DEVELOPMENT: changes, how these affect sleep
? SLEEP METHODS: secret tips that will change your life

It will stop the guesswork and give you:
A tried and tested approach (20 years of helping families with baby & toddler sleep)
Evidence-based
Gentle baby sleep methods
Holistic assessment
Nurture & Nourish nutrition program – all recipes have sleep-inducing ingredients and a perfect balance for a good nights sleep
Access to a closed Facebook group for one on one support from Karen and 90+ timecoded Facebook Live videos
Prevention for under 4 months so no need to do sleep training ever

← Older Post Newer Post →