Week Five
Week Five
Your baby is now five weeks old!
If you have chosen Plunket as your Well Child Health provider,
your local Plunket nurse will contact you to arrange a time for
them to visit you at home. This home visit is an opportunity for
you to meet your Plunket nurse and to discuss any concerns you may
have about your baby's development.
Your Plunket nurse will check your baby's height and weight. She
may also recommend other community based resources such as Parents
As First Teachers (PAFT) or coffee or play groups.
SKIN
Many babies will develop blotches and blemishes around five or
six weeks of age. Often looking like pimples. Bubs face and
top half of her body will be full of pimples. Don't worry
this is very normal, although if you're concerned that it looks
more like a rash see your doctor or midwife immediately.
FEEDING
By now, you have probably decided whether you are going to
demand feed, or routine feed your baby.
Some mothers and babies thrive with the regularity of routine. Set
feeding times can make it easier to plan your day.
Other mothers and babies prefer to demand feed, where baby is fed
according to his or her own individual needs.
There is no one right or wrong way to determine when you feed your
baby, and some mothers find that a combination of demand and
routine feeding works best.
YOU - SEX AFTER CHILDBIRTH
After having your baby, sex was probably the last thing on your
mind! Weeks of broken sleep, and night time feeds, leaking breasts
and tenderness after childbirth are also big turn-offs! But there
is sex after baby!
Most doctors recommend that you wait until at least four weeks
after giving birth before you have sex. Around this time, the
lochia stops, and most childbirth wounds have healed. If you have
had stitches, it may take a little longer.
The first time you have sex after giving birth may be a little
painful. The hormones which assist breastfeeding can cause vaginal
dryness, so it may help to use a lubricant. Take it slowly, and if
you experience severe pain or discomfort talk to your doctor.
It is also important to consider contraception at this time.
Breastfeeding does sometimes work as a contraceptive, but it is not
a reliable method. Talk to your doctor about what method of
contraception best suits you and your partner.
YOUR BABY'S DEVELOPMENT - PLAY
Babies learn through play, even from a very young age. At five
weeks, your baby may enjoy lying on a mat or blanket on the floor.
Baby gyms provide stimulation when baby is lying on his or her
back.
It is also important for baby to have 'tummy time' - time spent
lying on the floor on his or her tummy. Tummy time is important as
it helps to strengthen your baby's neck muscles, enabling him or
her to hold their head up, and prepare for crawling.
Baby may also enjoy spending time in a bouncinette, or rocker. This
props them upright and enables them to see the world around
them.