In a study of co-sleeping infants and solitary-sleeping infants, Baddock, Galland, Taylor, and Bolton (2006) found that parents of co-sleeping infants checked on them almost three times more per night than the parents of solitary sleeping infants (mean 11 times per night for co-sleepers ...
cared for in cribs and for 102 babies who shared their mothers'' beds, sleeping location was associated with no significant difference either in the weight loss (6.3% for each group) or the time taken to regain birthweight (5.3 days for crib-cared babies and 5.4 days for co-sleepers). ...
disclose various types of pet beds (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,161,484). Such devices also require support from legs extending to the ground, heavy, hard structured features, etc., thus suffering from many of the same limitations as discussed above with respect to infant/child co-sleepers...
And I’m lucky: none of my kids are real flailers or starfish sleepers.How do you keep the little guys from rolling off the bed? We have a Tres Tria pillow on either side of the bed. You put it underneath the fitted sheet. That’s one of my top baby purchases I ever got....