Stroking your baby’s silky skin, meeting her trusting gaze and taking
turns at listening to her ‘coos’ and ‘goos’ then responding, telling
her, “your tiny toes are like little pink peas,” or “your legs are
growing so long and strong,” is more than just a delightful way to enjoy
your little one’s company. Massaging your baby incorporates all the
elements of parent -child bonding as it stimulates your little one’s
senses through skin contact, eye contact and your familiar smell as well
as hearing your voice and experiencing a focussed response. This loving
interaction and sensory experience is hardwiring your baby’s immature
brain for emotional and neurological development: as you touch and talk
to your child and share eye contact, you stimulate the development of
connections between nerve cells in your baby’s brain that will form
foundations for thinking, feeling and learning.
Touch, especially, is a powerful nutrient for your baby’s development
– it is the first sense to develop, just days after conception, and is
important for a whole lifetime: it stimulates growth hormones as well as
hormones that relieve stress and those that encourage bonding and
attachment. By consciously spending just a few minutes each day
massaging with gentle firm pressure, you can help your baby become
calmer and happier. As well as releasing endorphins, those ‘feel good’
hormones that help us all reduce stress, massaging your baby will reduce
stress hormones such as cortisol and this can also have positive
effects on brain development. There is increasing evidence that high
levels of stress hormones are toxic to infant brains and may have
lasting effects on your child’s response to stressful experiences. Other
studies show that babies with lower levels of cortisol (a stress
hormone) in their blood do better at mental and motor ability tests.
There is good news for tired mums too: a few simple strokes can lull
your baby into a deeper, more restful sleep. According to Dr Tiffany
Field, director of the Touch Research Institute at the University of
Miami School of Medicine, “a massage just before bedtime is more
effective than rocking at helping your baby fall asleep and stay
asleep.” Dr Field’s studies are affirmed by researchers from Warwick
Medical School in the UK who looked at nine studies of massage covering a
total of 598 infants aged less than six months. These studies showed
that babies who were massaged cried less, slept better, and had lower
levels of stress hormones compared to infants who did not receive
massage. One of the studies also claimed that massage could affect the
release of the hormone melatonin which is important in aiding infants’
sleeping patterns.
In another study conducted by Dr Field, premature babies who were massaged gained 47 percent more weight and were discharged from hospital six days earlier
than babies in a control group, with follow up studies showing lasting
effects on growth and development. For premature babies, the experience
of touch is mostly painful as they endure various medical procedures and
tubes. Melinda Nott whose baby Pippa, now 14 months and almost walking,
was born at 27 weeks, says, “I honestly don’t think Pippa would have
been as advanced as she is if I hadn’t massaged her. Gently stroking her
legs and back in the humi-crib, then later, kangaroo care (cuddling
skin to skin) and massaging her tiny body helped us bond so much more
quickly. It also helped me feel more at ease and confident to care for
her even though she was very tiny.”
Infant massage is not only good for babies, it is good for parents
too. Several studies show that mothers who suffer from postnatal
depression improve when they incorporate infant massage into their daily
routine, and an Australian study of infant massage and father-baby
bonding, found that at 12 weeks old, babies who were massaged (by their
fathers) greeted their fathers with more eye contact, smiling,
vocalising and touch than those in the control group.
One of the most significant benefits of infant massage is that it can
increase your confidence as a parent. According to Tracey Gibney, a
midwife and certified instructor with Infant Massage Australia, “when
parents regularly massage their babies, they become very aware of the
subtle nuances in their baby’s communication, they become more
respectful of their baby’s cues and this helps the baby feel secure and
calm. After a few weeks of massaging their babies, I often have mothers
tell me “I am not so affected by advice from other people any more – I
know I am the expert about my baby.”
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