Why should you not kiss a newborn on the lips?

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asked Sep 8, 2022 in Baby/Newborn by theotherleg (940 points)
Why should you not kiss a newborn on the lips?

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answered Sep 8, 2022 by Glorybee (14,280 points)
The reason you should not kiss a newborn on the lips is because you can transfer bacteria and germs or transfer cold sores, blisters etc to the newborn.

You could cause fever blisters or cold sores on the baby's mouth which can spread to other areas of the baby's body and even the brain.

Babies can start laughing around 4 months of age.

Babies can begin smiling before then but it's not always an indication that they are happy but once your baby reaches 4 months of age and up they begin smiling because they are happy are having fun and they can begin laughing.

Some babies may laugh at 3 months and some babies may laugh around 5 months.

When babies smile in their sleep it's called neonatal smiling or reflex smiles which is a normal reflex that the baby cannot control.

A baby smiling while they are sleeping or sometimes at other times does not always mean the baby is happy or thinking about something happy.

Babies smiles are called “reflex smiles.”

Babies start reflex smiling before birth and continue to do so as newborns.

These smiles happen randomly and reflex smiling usually stops around 2 months after birth, right around the same time you can expect baby's first real smile.

The reason babies sometimes smile in their sleep is Neonatal Smiling which happens from birth to one month of age.

The Neonatal smiles happen during drowsiness or during the stages of REM sleep.

When a baby smiles in their sleep the babies smiles are subcortical in origin and will actually decrease with maturity.

Premature babies actually smile more in their sleep than full term babies do.

It's natural and it's actually cute as well but it soon will stop and you'll actually miss those cute smiles in the babies sleep.

A baby's first social smile usually appears by the end of their second month.

That's one reason why, as a pediatrician, seeing babies and their parents at the 2-month-old checkup is always a great pleasure.

Smiles have been noted in the first few days of life as a response to stroking of the cheek or the belly.

Newborns also smile in response to sweet tastes and smells.

These findings were published decades ago when smiles were considered purely as innate reflexes.

By three weeks, your baby may be trying out their first smile, copying your face movements and poking their tongue

They may even start making sounds other than crying, who'd of thought it?

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