Healthy newborns follow a comfortable pattern. They're up two or three times a night for food and comfort, but you expect these nocturnal disturbances with a new baby.
But at three or four months of age, everything changes. Your baby now wakes at all hours of the night, and exhaustion and frustration become the norm.
The good news is you haven't done anything wrong. Your baby's new sleep pattern (or lack thereof) is a biological response known as the four-month regression.
Infant sleep experts Meg Casano, BSN, MA, and Erin Flynn-Evans, PhD, MPH, provide the knowledge and strategies you need to get through the four-month regression and reestablish restful sleep patterns. Unlike many misleading and uninformed sleep "experts," Flynn-Evans and Casano base their advice on sound scientific principles so that you can act with confidence.
You'll discover how to spot early signs of the four-month regression, how to prevent it if possible, and how to resolve the issue if not. Doing so provides you with realistic expectations of your child's nighttime sleeping patterns and helps you guide your baby back to a healthy, restful nighttime routine.
About the Author: Meg Casano, BSN, MA, holds a bachelor of science in nursing from Villanova University and a master's degree in biomedical ethics from Case Western Reserve University. She worked as a clinical nurse at a New York City hospital and as school nurse before starting Baby Sleep Science. She lives with her husband and four young daughters.
Erin Flynn-Evans, PhD, MPH, is a member of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms. She has published many peer-reviewed articles on sleep and circadian rhythms and is known nationally and internationally for her research.
Casano and Flynn-Evans spent four and a half years creating a renowned sleep support program based in Boston that included both in-class and online instruction as well as consultations.
Together, they launched Baby Sleep Science in 2014.