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From Tiny Tot to Toddler 2025
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Mieux Vivre

  • Pregnancy
    • Pregnancy
    • The stages of pregnancy
      • The stages of pregnancy
      • Before pregnancy
      • Fertilization
      • Length of pregnancy
      • Due date
      • Back
    • The fetus
      • The fetus
      • Development of the fetus
      • Fetus’s environment
      • Back
    • Everyday life during pregnancy
      • Everyday life during pregnancy
      • Physical changes
      • Emotional changes
      • Sexuality
      • Personal care
      • Physical activities
      • Tobacco and electronic cigarette
      • Alcohol
      • Cannabis and other drugs
      • Household products
      • Cats
      • Gardening
      • Health and safety at work
      • Travel and trips
      • Back
    • Nutrition during pregnancy
      • Nutrition during pregnancy
      • Eating well
      • Nutritional needs of pregnant women
      • Eating regularly
      • Appetite, cravings, and aversions
      • On the menu: variety, colours, and flavours
      • Essential nutrients
      • Drinks
      • Special needs
      • Diets
      • Preventing allergies
      • Preventing food-borne infections
      • Resources
      • Back
    • Prenatal care
      • Prenatal care
      • Professionals and services
      • Prenatal care
      • Other types of care
      • Back
    • Health during pregnancy
      • Health during pregnancy
      • Medication and natural health products
      • Discomforts of pregnancy
      • Common health problems
      • Warning signs
      • Miscarriage and mourning
      • High-risk pregnancies
      • Domestic violence during pregnancy
      • Back
    • Preparing to breastfeed
      • Preparing to breastfeed
      • Making the decision to breastfeed
      • A learned skill
      • Starting milk production: the first few days
      • Ways to make breastfeeding easier
      • Common concerns and possible problems
      • The importance of a support network
      • Back
    • Preparing for the birth
      • Preparing for the birth
      • Visiting the hospital or birthing centre
      • What to bring to the hospital or birthing centre
      • Vaginal birth after caesarean
      • Breech presentation
      • Birth plan
      • Preparing for the baby’s arrival
      • Back
    • Exit Back
  • Delivery
    • Delivery
    • The start of labour
      • The start of labour
      • Recognizing the start of labour
      • When should I go to the hospital or birthing centre?
      • Understanding and coping with pain
      • Back
    • The stages of childbirth
      • The stages of childbirth
      • First stage: Thinning and opening of the cervix
      • Second stage: Descent and birth of your baby
      • Third stage: Delivery of the placenta
      • First moments with your baby
      • Back
    • Possible interventions during labour
      • Possible interventions during labour
      • Stripping the membranes
      • Inducing labour
      • Stimulating labour
      • Monitoring the baby’s health
      • Pain medication
      • Episiotomy
      • Caesarean
      • Back
    • The first few days
      • The first few days
      • Skin-to-skin contact
      • Your stay at the hospital or birthing centre
      • When the unexpected happens
      • The body after birth
      • Baby blues
      • Depression
      • Sexuality after birth
      • Birth control
      • Back
    • Exit Back
  • Baby
    • Baby
    • The newborn
      • The newborn
      • Fetal position
      • Size and weight
      • Skin
      • Eyes
      • Head
      • Swollen breasts
      • Genitals
      • Spots
      • Sneezing
      • Hiccups
      • The need for warmth
      • Urine
      • Stools
      • Back
    • Talking with your baby
      • Talking with your baby
      • Crying
      • The need to suck
      • Touch
      • Taste and smell
      • Hearing
      • Eyesight
      • Back
    • Sleep
      • Sleep
      • Sleeping safely
      • Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)
      • Preventing a flat head
      • Sleep in the first weeks
      • Sleep at around 4 months
      • Sleep after 6 months
      • Sleep between 1 and 2 years old
      • Back
    • Your child’s development
      • Your child’s development
      • Temperament
      • The parent-child relationship
      • Structure
      • Play
      • Books
      • Screens
      • Stages of growth
      • Toilet training
      • Emergent reading and writing
      • Back
    • Exit Back
  • Feeding your child
    • Feeding your child
    • Feeding your baby
      • Feeding your baby
      • An act of love
      • Hunger signs
      • Feeding schedule
      • Is your baby drinking enough milk?
      • Growth spurts
      • Hiccups
      • Burping
      • Regurgitation
      • Gas
      • Excessive crying (colic)
      • Allergies and intolerances
      • Social pressure
      • Baby’s changing needs
      • Feeding a premature baby
      • Vitamin D: Not your ordinary vitamin!
      • Back
    • Milk
      • Milk
      • Which milk is best?
      • Mother’s milk
      • Producing breast milk
      • The composition of human milk
      • Handling expressed milk
      • Commercial infant formula (commercial milk)
      • Handling commercial infant formula
      • Other types of milk
      • Back
    • Breastfeeding your baby
      • Breastfeeding your baby
      • Breastfeeding: A learned skill
      • Getting help
      • Your breasts during nursing
      • Breastfeeding basics
      • How often to nurse—and how long?
      • Breastfeeding phases
      • Is breastfeeding still possible?
      • Expressing milk
      • Bottle-feeding your breastfed baby
      • Breastfeeding challenges
      • Common difficulties
      • Breastfeeding accessories
      • When breastfeeding doesn’t go as planned
      • Weaning
      • Back
    • Bottle-feeding your baby
      • Bottle-feeding your baby
      • Choosing baby bottles and nipples
      • How much milk?
      • Warming milk
      • Bottle-feeding your baby
      • Bottle-feeding problems
      • Cleaning bottles, nipples  and breast pumps
      • Back
    • Water
      • Water
      • When to give your baby water
      • Boil water for babies under 4 months
      • Choosing the right water
      • Municipal tap water
      • Private well water
      • Bottled water
      • Bulk water
      • Water coolers
      • Water treatment devices
      • Water problems
      • Back
    • Foods
      • Foods
      • When should I introduce foods?
      • How should I introduce foods?
      • Choking risk: Be extra careful until age 4
      • Honey—never for babies under age 1
      • Baby food basics
      • Baby-led weaning (BLW)
      • 6 to 12 months—your baby’s first foods
      • Start with iron-rich foods
      • Continue with a variety of foods
      • Grain products
      • Meat and alternatives
      • Vegetables and fruit
      • Milk and dairy products
      • Fats
      • Food ideas for your baby
      • From 1 year onward—sharing meals with the family
      • Back
    • Food-related problems
      • Food-related problems
      • Food allergies
      • Lactose intolerance
      • Anemia
      • Poor appetite
      • Chubby babies
      • Stools and foods
      • Constipation
      • Back
    • Exit Back
  • Health
    • Health
    • A healthy baby
      • A healthy baby
      • Holding your newborn
      • Caring for the umbilical cord
      • Bathing your baby
      • Nasal irrigation
      • Baby's teeth
      • Cutting your baby’s nails
      • Choosing diapers
      • Medical checkups
      • Consulting health professionals
      • Baby’s growth
      • Vaccination
      • Back
    • Common health problems
      • Common health problems
      • A well-stocked medicine cabinet
      • Newborn jaundice
      • Thrush in the mouth
      • Pimples, redness, and other skin problems
      • Eye problems
      • Allergies
      • Common childhood infections
      • Fever
      • Fever and skin rashes
      • Colds and flu
      • Stuffed-up or runny nose
      • Cough
      • Sore throat
      • Ear infection
      • Diarrhea
      • Vomiting
      • Dehydration
      • Back
    • Keeping baby safe
      • Keeping baby safe
      • Travelling safely
      • Babyproofing
      • Living in a smoke-free environment
      • Choosing toys
      • Preventing falls
      • Preventing drowning
      • Preventing suffocation and choking
      • Preventing burns
      • Preventing dog bites
      • Preventing poisoning
      • Protecting your baby from the sun
      • Protecting your baby from insect bites
      • Back
    • First aid
      • First aid
      • Bites
      • Scrapes and cuts
      • Small object in the nose
      • Nosebleeds
      • Oral and dental injuries
      • Bumps and blows to the head
      • Burns
      • Electrical shock
      • Foreign object or chemical product in an eye
      • Poisoning and contact with hazardous products
      • Insect bites
      • Choking
      • Loss of consciousness
      • Back
    • Exit Back
  • Family
    • Family
    • Being a father
      • Being a father
      • Becoming a father
      • Importance of the father-child relationship
      • During the pregnancy
      • During delivery
      • After the birth
      • Feeding baby together
      • Working as a team with your partner
      • Back
    • Being a mother
      • Being a mother
      • Becoming a mother
      • Taking care of yourself
      • Trusting yourself
      • Back
    • Being parents
      • Being parents
      • Co-parenting
      • Caring for your relationship
      • You don’t need to be perfect!
      • Back
    • Growing as a family
      • Growing as a family
      • New families, new situations
      • Reaction of older children
      • Grandparents
      • Twins
      • Being a parent of a baby who is different
      • Taking baby for a walk
      • Family activities
      • Childcare and babysitting
      • Budgeting for baby
      • Being environmentally aware
      • Choosing clothes
      • Asking for help
      • Back
    • Exit Back
  • Useful information
    • Useful information
    • Programs and services
      • Programs and services
      • Government programs and services
      • Back
    • Resources for parents
      • Resources for parents
      • Telephone help line resources
      • Associations, agencies and support groups
      • Back
    • Exit Back

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Displaying 11 - 20 of 308.
  • Read more about What to bring to the hospital or birthing centre

    What to bring to the hospital or birthing centre

    Here you will find a suggestion of things to pack in the bags for the mother, the father and the baby: health and hospital insurance card, birth plan, comfortable clothes, sanitary pads, snacks, toiletry bags, medications, From Tiny Tot to Toddler guide, etc.

  • Read more about Birth plan

    Birth plan

    When your baby is born, you have decisions to make as parents about the treatment and care mom and baby will receive. Keep in mind that no one knows ahead of time how the birth will go and that you may change your minds during delivery.

  • Read more about Vaginal birth after caesarean

    Vaginal birth after caesarean

    Women who have had a caesarean (also known as a caesarean section or C-section) are often able to give birth to subsequent children vaginally. Approximately three in four women who prepare for a vaginal birth after a caesarean (VBAC) do give birth vaginally.

  • Read more about Breech presentation

    Breech presentation

    If your baby is positioned with his feet or buttocks facing downward (breech), your doctor or midwife may want to attempt to turn him at around 36 or 37 weeks. This technique, known as version, is used to move the baby into a head-down position and increases your odds of having a vaginal……

  • Read more about Recognizing the start of labour

    Recognizing the start of labour

    No one can predict when and how your labour will begin. Most women will recognize labour because of certain telltale signs, such as contractions or their waters breaking. It’s normal at that point to feel excited or anxious.

  • Read more about When should I go to the hospital or birthing centre?

    When should I go to the hospital or birthing centre?

    Towards the end of your pregnancy, your doctor or midwife will explain to you the right time to head to the hospital or birthing centre. This will depend on the distance you have to travel, your previous deliveries, your health, and the state of your cervix.

  • Read more about Pain medication

    Pain medication

    In hospitals, certain drugs can be administered to ease birthing pains. The following options may be offered to you: an epidural, narcotics, nitrous oxide gas, or a pudendal nerve block.

  • Read more about Understanding and coping with pain

    Understanding and coping with pain

    The pain of labour is unique and serves a purpose. It signals the start of the opening process that will lead to the birth of your baby. This process happens gradually. A rhythm develops and the intensity of the pain steadily increases.

  • Read more about The stages of childbirth

    The stages of childbirth

    Throughout labour your body undergoes changes to allow your baby to make his way to the world outside. Labour is divided into these three main stages: First stage: Thinning and opening of the cervix (also called dilation); Second stage: Descent and birth of your baby; Third stage…

  • Read more about First stage: Thinning and opening of the cervix

    First stage: Thinning and opening of the cervix

    The first stage of labour is the period when your contractions start to be regular. These contractions allow the cervix to thin (efface) and open completely (dilate), until it is 10 centimetres wide.

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