Early
potty training in vogue for some parents
WASHINGTON
- Call it the diaper-free revolution or too much too soon but a
growing number of parents in the United States are trying to
wean their infants off diapers even before they can walk.
The parents say it is
common in other cultures and cite a number of advantages. No
more diaper rash, no more money spent on expensive diapers and
no more overflowing, foul-smelling trash bins.
Melinda Rothstein, mother
of seven-month-old Hannah and three-year-old Samuel, said her
concerns about adding yet more man-made rubbish to the world’s
landfills helped persuade her to adopt “elimination
communication” with her daughter.
“I was concerned about
the environment,” Rothstein told AFP in a telephone interview.
“The savings are a big
plus, but mostly it’s about having a close relationship with
the kid,” she said.
Rothstein, who has founded
the non-profit association DiaperFreeBaby.org to spread the
word, said the technique encourages her daughter to convey her
needs.
Soon after giving birth to
Hannah, Rothstein showed her how to use the potty seat. For the
first three months, Rothstein put cloth diapers on her daughter
while looking for the right moments to place Hannah on the
potty.
Making a small “pssss”
sound, parents encourage the child to urinate. And with a little
grunt, they try to stimulate a bowel movement.
According to diaper-free
advocates, the best opportunity presents itself after a baby
wakes in the morning or after a nap and a few minutes after
nursing or feeding.
After a while, the parents
begin to recognize and mimic the telltale signs of an imminent
event. At about six or seven months, the baby learns to take a
seat and to signal her requirements to Mom or Dad.
“Now she lets me know
when she needs to go, occasionally she uses sign language or
when she’s in a sling she pushes me away,” Rothstein said.
The fledgling diaper-free
movement still has only a small following and runs counter to
prevailing attitudes in a country where it is not unusual to see
four-year-old children in diapers playing in the park.
Early
toilet training can backfire?
The conventional wisdom on
toilet training has advised caution, letting things take their
course.
According to the writings
of the late Benjamin Spock, whose baby books have served as a
kind of Bible for many US parents since the 1940s, early toilet
training can eventually backfire.
“During the first year
there is a small amount of readiness for partial training in
some babies in the sense that they always have their first
movement of the day within five or ten minutes after
breakfast,” the pediatrician wrote in his best-selling book,
“Dr. Spock’s Baby and Child Care.”
Although parents can place
the baby on the potty seat to “catch” the bowel movement, it
does not add up to genuine toilet training because the infant
has merely been conditioned to respond to the toilet underneath,
he said.
“This is a small degree
of training, but it’s not learning because the baby is not
really conscious of the bowel movement or of what she herself is
doing,” Spock wrote.
“She’s not cooperating
knowingly. And some babies who have been ‘caught’ early in
this way are more apt to rebel later through prolonged soiling
or bed-wetting.”
Jean-Claude Liaudet, a
French psychoanalyst, agrees.
“Toilet training must be
carried out when an infant has acquired sufficient muscular
control, and not at a pre-established age and under
constraints,” Liaudet wrote.
Yet Rothstein and other
proponents say that early toilet training, far from being a
return to the rigid ways of an earlier age, is a way of adapting
to an infant’s rhythms.
“Elimination
communication should always be gentle, non-coercive, and based
on babies’ interests and needs,” according to the
DiaperFreeBaby website.
Some sceptics question if
it’s realistic to promote the idea when so many working
parents lack the time required to monitor every toilet
opportunity. And others, such as Emmy Kelly of Des Moines, Iowa,
wonder whether it has much to do with the child in the end.
“What your article
describes isn’t toilet training...,” Kelly wrote in a letter
to the New York Times. “It’s parent training!”
AFP
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