© 2024 Interlochen
CLASSICAL IPR | 88.7 FM Interlochen | 94.7 FM Traverse City | 88.5 FM Mackinaw City IPR NEWS | 91.5 FM Traverse City | 90.1 FM Harbor Springs/Petoskey | 89.7 FM Manistee/Ludington
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

For baby and mom, that first hour after birth matters

Flickr user howardignatius/Flickr

More and more hospitals around Michigan and across the country are starting to implement what’s called “Kangaroo Care,” skin-to-skin bonding for mothers and their newborn babies.

Dr. Cat Macardle is senior resident in the Dept. of OBGYN at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann Arbor. She explained how skin-to-skin contact between baby and mom does “wonderful things.”

As Macardle said, skin-to-skin contact between mom and baby, about an hour after birth, helps regulate baby’s temperature, glucose, bilirubin and more. But it’s not only baby who benefits – mom does too.

That contact gives mom a large burst of oxytocin, the “feel-good hormone,” Macardle said. It also stops the new mother from bleeding as much. But even more than that, Macardle said skin-to-skin contact helps the new mother and her child bond more effectively.

“We know that their attachment bonding process just works so much better,” Macardle said. “Right up to about a year, we see moms who’ve had skin-to-skin straight after birth do things like touch their children more and caress their babies a little bit more and bring them to their pediatricians more often – which is fascinating.”

Macardle said it is possible for women who have c-sections to partake in kangaroo care too. While it is not known whether the benefits of skin-to-skin contact between babies and dads, partners and grandparents are the same, she says she “can’t imagine they’re detrimental.”

Listen to Dr. Cat Macardle's full interview on Stateside.

Copyright 2021 Michigan Radio. To see more, visit Michigan Radio.

Lindsey Scullen started at Michigan Radio last year as an intern for Stateside. Now she’s with the Environment Report as a newsroom and web intern. At the same time, she’s finishing up her final semester at the University of Michigan where she majors in Comparative Literature and Spanish, and minors in Environment and Complex Systems. She moonlights as a fairly poor, yet resolute, salsa dancer.