Lifestyle
Why newborn babies are immediately placed on their mother’s chest
Skin-to-skin contact is when a baby is dried and placed on the mother’s bare chest after birth, covered in a warm blanket. In neonatal units, it is known as ‘kangaroo care’.
The process of skin-to-skin contact
Why is skin-to-skin contact special?
- It calms and relaxes both, regulates the baby’s heart rate and breathing, and stimulates digestion.
- It also boosts oxygen saturation, lowers cortisol levels, promotes pre-feeding behaviour, and shortens hospital stays.
- Increases milk volume if the mother feeds after skin-to-skin contact, with the expressed milk carrying the most recent antibodies.
- It also regulates temperature and allows friendly bacteria from the mother to colonise the baby’s skin, which provides infection protection.
- Stimulates hormone release for breastfeeding and mothering.
