2024-08-13
한어Русский языкEnglishFrançaisIndonesianSanskrit日本語DeutschPortuguêsΕλληνικάespañolItalianoSuomalainenLatina
I am Zhang, a confinement nanny, and I have some suggestions for the question raised by the questioner. Why do babies always cry when they go to sleep at night? First of all, we need to determine how many weeks the baby is? In addition to crying, are there any other symptoms? If a healthy baby of 2 to 4 weeks old, with adequate nutrition, is not hungry, wet, or sleepy, cries for at least three hours a day, at least three days a week, and the episodes last for more than three weeks, we should consider whether the baby has colic?
Last month, Liu Jie, a new confinement nanny, took on an order. She was doing well in the early stages, but when she only had one week to complete the order, something went wrong. It turned out that for two consecutive days, the baby kept crying. It was okay when feeding, but he would start crying again after less than half an hour of silence, and every time it was in the evening, just like an alarm clock. The baby's diaper had been changed, and he had breast milk. He wasn't sleepy, and he didn't catch a cold. Why was he always crying like this? The whole family was worried, and Liu Jie was anxious, and she forgot what the teacher said.
This client's baby was their first child, and the parents had no experience. The grandparents were so angry that they thought the nanny had abused the baby. They called the company to complain, demanding an immediate replacement, a salary deduction, and compensation. That was a big deal. The teacher immediately rushed to the client's home, carefully checked the baby's physical condition, found nothing abnormal, and asked about the time the baby cried, concluding that the baby had colic.