BabyPlus Mom and Supermodel, Niki Taylor, Marches with March of Dimes/March for Babies

Thursday, May 3, 2012 by Julie Louly

 

Internationally known super-model and BabyPlus mom, Niki Taylor, proudly participated in March of Dimes' March for Babies to help raise awareness and critical funds for healthier, stronger babies.

Taylor joined the March of Dimes in kicking off the walk in at Tropical Park in Miami, FL on the morning of Saturday, April 28th.  The walk was close to the area where Taylor grew up.  She’s such a great mom and involved citizen. 

Herself a mother to a five month old son, a three year old daughter, and two very handsome 17 year old twin boys, Taylor connects with the cause and the need for people to sign up for the walk and fundraise. “I am proud to bring my own young ones out to be part of this event. Together we will walk for healthier babies, and for those born too soon and need our help.”   Taylor truly seems to care about the health and well-being of children.

Last fall Niki appeared on the hit TV show, The Doctors, discussing her favorite things for pregnancy and healthy living.  She mentioned The BabyPlus Prenatal Education System as one of her must have pregnancy items.  Taylor touted the benefits of using the system during her two most recent pregnancies. She said her daughter began good sleeping patterns early and was alert and calm from birth.  It’s terrific to see such a progressive mom who is educated on the important connection between early brain development and auditory stimulation. 

Babies born prematurely (before 37 weeks gestation) may be at risk for developmental problems that could persist throughout their lives, including problems with auditory attention, or the child’s ability to concentrate on and listen to sounds for an extended period of time, especially in a distracted environment.

An important study regarding prematurity was conducted by Emily Zimmerman, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Amir Lahav, ScD, PhD, focused on how premature infants respond to various sounds. The study may have the long-term potential to determine whether there is an early biomarker for ADHD, which typically isn’t detected until school age.  “Our findings show that there may be a window of opportunity to improve the physiological health of babies born prematurely using auditory simulation,” he said.

The research linked exposure to an audio recording of the mother’s heartbeat and her voice to a lower incidence of cardio-respiratory events in preterm infants. These infants typically experience high rates of adverse heart and lung events, such as apnea, a pause in breathing that lasts longer than 20 seconds, and bradycardia, slowing of the heart rate below 80 beats per minute. Researchers found that cardio-respiratory events occurred at a much lower frequency when the infants were exposed to maternal sound stimulation versus routine hospital noise and sounds.

“The results also suggest that there is a period of time when the infant’s auditory development is most intact that this intervention of maternal sound stimulation could be most effective,” Lahav said. “However, further research is needed.”

Are you participating in a walk for the March of  Dimes? We want to hear all about it! Tag us in your Facebook photos and tell us your story!  When you walk in March for Babies, you give hope to the more than half a million babies born too soon each year.

Prenatal Brain Development Linked to Specialized Sound

Thursday, April 19, 2012 by Julie Louly

If you’re an expectant parent interested in prenatal brain development, then this will be one of the most important articles you’ll ever read.

Here’s why…  I’m going to share with you the fascinating link between providing an enriched auditory environment during your pregnancy and the significantly enhanced development of your child’s mind.

From the moment we see a positive result on a pregnancy test; we begin to navigate the complicated world of being a parent. Almost immediately, the barrage of advertising messages and opinions from well-meaning friends and family can often cause confusion about what is best for our baby.   I am doing what I did throughout my first two pregnancies; getting educated about what will make a difference and then going with my gut!  Pregnancy (though it seems to drag on forever) is a relatively short period in your baby’s long life of learning and development.  Take the time to look at the latest research about early cognition and prenatal brain development. 

We know so much more now about prenatal brain development than ever before.  It’s really exciting to be armed with powerful information about things like DHA and the importance of an enriched prenatal auditory environment.  No matter how you choose to communicate with your baby, after week 18 he’ll be listening and likely hungry for more.  Babies with an enriched nurturing auditory environment often show an increased ability to self-soothe and are more responsive at birth.  Later, parents of these same children report to have improved school readiness and longer attention spans.   

Fetal Brain Development

Experience is an essential component of prenatal brain development.   A prenatal child's specific experiences determine which connections are strengthened and expanded, and which connections are eliminated. 

  • Connections that are used repeatedly become stronger. 
  • Connections that are not used are eventually lost to pruning. 
  • Repetition is important because it provides the child with multiple opportunities to strengthen connections and enhance prenatal brain development.

It also is important that experiences be enriching. A prenatal child should have regular opportunities to experience sounds that are new and different. These experiences should be challenging, but not overwhelming, just a step beyond what he can already do.  Your womb truly is the perfect classroom! A developmentally appropriate set of sounds that introduce patterns of rhythm to the baby similar to the maternal heartbeat are most likely to make the biggest impact on his/her prenatal brain development...  As a baby discriminates the simple rhythmic sounds from those of his mother, auditory learning begins.

The human brain begins forming very early in prenatal life (just three weeks after conception), but in many ways, brain development is a lifelong project. That is because the same events that shape the brain during development are also responsible for storing information—new skills and memories—throughout life. The major difference between prenatal brain development in the womb versus learning at a later age is a matter of degree: the brain is far more impressionable (neuroscientists use the term plastic) in early life than in maturity. This plasticity has both a positive and a negative side. On the positive side, it means that young children's brains are more open to learning and enriching influences.

Bilingualism in Babies Starts in the Womb

A recent joint study from Canadian and French researchers finds infants born to bilingual mother’s exhibit different language preferences than infants born to moms who speak only one language.  Bilingualism has been linked to a variety of positive cognitive benefits, including early ready, better critical think skills and longer attention spans.  Now we know what the baby experiences in his prenatal environment truly matters to the prenatal brain development in this small window of opportunity.  The study was published in the January 29, 2010, journal  Psychological Science.  Many expectant parents are not bilingual or have a preference for only one language thus never exposing baby to this important auditory enrichment.  The one consistently heard sound in the prenatal environment 24 hours 7 days a week is the mom’s heart beat.  Based on more than 23 years of scientific research the BabyPlus Prenatal Education System provides a patented curriculum that introduces a developing baby to learning in the only true and consistent language of the prenatal environment, a language based on the maternal heartbeat.  Studies show that a fetus does recognize the maternal heartbeat and can differentiate progressive versions of that sound.  Much like early language immersion, the simple, naturally derived lessons are the most effective at strengthening a lifetime of strong learning.  This early advantage during prenatal brain development means children will be able to absorb and appreciate far more of their environment than if they had not received this prenatal enrichment.  This might also be a fabulous time to turn your car into a “university on wheels” and begin a language course.  I am a big fan of Rosetta stone but there are many great options on the market. 

When it comes to IQ  - environment matters

You have probably heard the phrase nature versus nurture. It tends to pop up whenever we gain some new insight into prenatal brain development. Has some aspect of personality or intelligence come about as a result of genes and part of our inborn nature? Or because of the influence of parents, teachers, or other aspects of the environment that nurtured us?  The answer is both. 

In a study published in 2008 UCLA researchers found about 85 percent of the variation in white matter in the parietal lobe, which is involved in mathematics, logic, and visual-spatial skills, can be attributed to genetics. Only about 45 percent of the variation in the temporal lobe, which plays a central role in learning and memory, appears to be inherited.  This is the same part of the brain most impacted by an enriched auditory environment early in prenatal brain development.  Being armed with this knowledge is empowering to expectant parents all over the world.  A well-organized brain has well-functioning myelin, in which water can be seen clearly moving along specific paths. "Diffusion imaging gives a picture of how intact your brain connections are," says Paul Thompson, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, who lead the study. 

Fetal Response to outside stimuli

Another important study came from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hua Chiew Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand.  The study focused on the fetal response to outside stimuli and assessed the capacity of the fetus’ memory and learning in various senses.  Researchers trained 120 pregnant mothers to practice the prenatal activity of auditory enrichment.  They used a heartbeat sound, music and rhythmic patting and rocking. The below results provide further reinforcement that giving baby an enriched auditory environment before birth really can make a difference in prenatal brain development:

 The clinical data and the evaluation sheet for analysis of fetal response and learning to prenatal activity were assessed in term of always, frequent, sometime, seldom and never response. The outcome of these samples demonstrated that 87.5% of experimental infants can recognize maternal voice and 70% recognize to prenatal music. They calm down significantly when giving a prenatal music, heart beat sound, rhythmic patting and rocking pattern which they ever received during in utero. This suggests that fetus can learn variety of sensory stimuli even before birth and these previous experiences they received in utero during this important prenatal brain development period may influence postnatal learning and perception. Experimental infants have a capacity of turning to voice only at 4.6 days in average while the general population turn to voice at 3.2 month. This means that they have a faster auditory development and learning than general population. In addition, they can be conditioned by kicking back when they were pat in 64.9%. The results confirm our belief that fetus have a capacity of conditional learning during the prenatal brain development stage. The study also showed better performance in relation between mother and child after participated the prenatal activity. These findings suggest that prenatal activity here may be introduced to routine prenatal care and may be an effective way to enhance mother and child attachment, as well as promote infant's intelligent and emotional development.

Dr. Susan Ludington-Hoe states in her book How to Have a Smarter Baby, “Infant stimulation accelerates a baby’s mental ability and increases a child’s skills in finding ways to stimulate himself.”

More evidence prenatal brain development can be impacted by environment

In a study designed to create an enriched environment for prenates by minimizing environmental stressors and substituting a positive, stimulating milieu, researchers designed a program that would reduce maternal stress with visualization and relaxation exercises, encourage mother-child bonding through prenatal communication and interaction exercises, and pleasantly stimulate prenatal auditory, tactile, visual and vestibular processes. Results from 150 pregnant women in the enrichment program compared to 100 pregnant women in a control group showed that infant head circumference, as an analog of prenatal brain development in the enriched group was significantly larger than that of the control group. Moreover, most dimensions on the Denver assessment scales showed earlier acquisition of gross and fine motor skills, language, and personal-social development by the enriched group compared to sample norms of Bangkok children.  Dr. Panthuraamphorn's research in creating positive and stimulating prenatal environments spans a number of studies with colleagues Dawiep Dookchitra and Manit Sanmaneechai who were co-researchers in a 1995 study focusing on auditory stimulation

DHA in Pregnancy: Should you Supplement?

DHA (or docosahexaenoic acid) an omega-3 fatty acid found in fish oil helps build your baby’s brain, nervous system, and eyes.  “Omega -3s are a specific type of fate that our body needs but cannot make,” says Melinda Johnson, RD, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association.  A baby in utero needs to get these fats from its mother for better prenatal brain development.  Researchers at the School of Pediatrics and Child Health at the University of Western Australia found that two years after birth, the children whose mothers had received a high dose of fish oil in the 2nd half of pregnancy, one of the important stages in prenatal brain development, had higher scores in tests of their hand-eye coordination.  Another interesting study from the University of Oslo in Norway, found four year olds scored better on IQ tests if their mothers took DHA supplements during pregnancy.  .

How much DHA do you need?

Your brain is made up of about 60% omega 3 fatty acids found in fish oil. And your baby's brain is about 70% of these acids. But studies show, you're probably deficient in them. In fact, most Westerners don't get enough of these important nutrients. According to the Journal of Perinatal Medicine, pregnant or lactating women need 200 mg of DHA a day.  Researchers are still evaluating the best possible sources for DHA.  Readily available sources are salmon, sardines, walnuts, eggs and milk.  If you would rather take a DHA supplement many researchers suggest you go for the one derived from algae rather than fish oil. (Then you will be getting your DHA just as the fish do; their source is marine algae.) Look for high levels of DHA. This is the "building block" of your child's prenatal brain development and is found in omega 3 fatty acids. Nevertheless, not all fish oil blends have a high amount of this important nutrient. The bottle will tell you how much DHA is in the product. Remember always consult with your obstetrician before making any changes to your prenatal routine. 

Prenatal auditory enrichment and DHA -  a winning combination for prenatal brain development

Prenatal learning and auditory enrichment is as vital to prenatal brain development as a prenatal vitamin is to enriching a baby’s physical development.  The BabyPlus Prenatal Education System offers developmental benefits that last a lifetime.  Moms everywhere are singing the praises of this prenatal system.  Celebrity moms like Nicole Richie and Gwen Stefani, just to name a few, have worn BabyPlus Prenatal Systems during pregnancy.  It is universal when a mom finds something that works for her she tells all of her friends.  It is the one thing women from every corner of the world have in common; we all want what is best for our children.  The BabyPlus Prenatal Education System is the only product of its kind on the market.   The system offers parents the opportunity to give their baby a head start while at the same time bonding with baby in a meaningful way.

 

A recent survey shows BabyPlus babies reach cognitive and developmental milestones ahead of recorded averages.  A survey of more than 350 BabyPlus parents indicates the majority of BabyPlus babies are calm and alert at birth. The survey also shows babies of parents, who used the BabyPlus educational system during pregnancy, sleep through the night, say their first words and take their first steps earlier than recorded averages for those milestones. In this first formal survey of BabyPlus parents, 84 percent of respondents said their baby was calm at birth and 96 percent said their baby was alert at birth.  In reaching their earliest developmental milestones, 68 percent of respondents said their children were sleeping more than six ours in a row by the age of three months compared to a four month average for infants; 48 percent reported their child said their first word by the age of six months compared to an average age of nine months; and 76 percent said their children took first steps before the age of 12 months compared to the a 12-15 month average.  In addition 98 percent of respondents described their baby as having an overall good disposition.   

 

 

 

Super Model Niki Taylor and BabyPlus!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011 by Cindy Wallander
Check this out!

picture source:  thedoctorstv.com

World-famous supermodel and mother of four Niki Taylor joins The Doctors to share health tricks for moms on the go!


After Niki talked about a very healthy smoothie - she talked about using BabyPlus.  Niki used BabyPlus with her daughter Ciel and saw great benefits - such as these (in her own words!):

"She is so alert, saying full sentences, got on a sleeping pattern very early at 8 months - her first word was apple."Watch Niki on The Doctors!


Niki is expecting again and is using BabyPlus because she knows that the 16 lessons based on the mother's heartbeat help during brain development. 

Congratulations to Niki for doing the very best for her babies!

(source: thedoctorstv.com)

another 5 star review at Amazon - BabyPlus parents see results!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010 by Cindy Wallander
5.0 out of 5 stars BabyPlus is Amazing!, November 23, 2010
This review is from: BabyPlus Prenatal Education 5 out of 5 stars at Amazon.com!System (Baby Product)
I have had a very positive experience with the BabyPlus Company and product. My infant has made me a believer in the BabyPlus product due to his calm nature, and his sleeping and eating patterns. I am so glad I knew about BabyPlus to get the product for my pregnancy. The positive information about prenatal learning on the BabyPlus website and in numerous other resources is impressive. BabyPlus will benefit me and my baby for a lifetime!

A Better Sleeping Baby

Tuesday, November 2, 2010 by BabyPlus- Guest Blog
Did you know that BabyPlus can help aid the sleeping patterns and habits of your newborn? During the prenatal period, the brain is in its most responsive stage of learning. By elevating the auditory atmosphere during this time, independent studies have shown that a child's long term learning capacities are improved.
 
Regulation begins during pregnancy with the mutual responses between a mother and her unborn baby. The mother's eating, sleep and activity patterns are experienced by her baby in the womb. This is what BabyPlus is all about. Read more from real parents about how BabyPlus has aided their baby’s sleeping patterns.

He is 2 months old now, and has been sleeping through the night (11 hours at a time) since he was 2 weeks.” -V. Altman

I definitely recommend the BabyPlus. Sure, the extended family made fun of us, calling it "the knocker" and saying we were nerds and we would drive the baby nuts . . . but she is almost 18 months now and has always been an excellent sleeper, a healthy eater, has a wonderful disposition.” -Jennifer Allen

 

She nursed immediately after birth with practically no help, she has slept 6 hours through the night since we have been home from the hospital, only cries when she needs something,and is very alert. -Ava


Thousands of sleeping babies' parents can't be wrong!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010 by Shelly Keefe
Everyone tells new moms to expect sleepless nights with non-stop feedings and diaper changings but you don't really understand until you are actually going through it. 

There's no doubt about it -- lack of sleep is hard!  You would give anything to go back to during pregnancy so you could Google about how to have a "calm baby", how to "make baby sleep", and how to "help baby sleep".   But, no fear!  You used BabyPlus during pregnancy! 

Thousands of parents who used BabyPlus during pregnancy have reported their little ones sleep better and sleep through the night sooner.  While BabyPlus doesn't promise a perfect baby sleep pattern, thousands of parents all over the world can't be wrong.



"I don’t think buying this is about trying to make your baby a genius but if you are interested in giving your baby a bit of a headstart, surely it’s worth a go...."

Monday, July 19, 2010 by Cindy Wallander
BabyPlus is used all over the world!These are the words of a UK BabyPlus "mum"

"I was recommended BabyPlus by a friend who used it during her two pregnancies and raved about it. To be perfectly honest I was skeptical but after reading up on it decided that it couldn’t do any harm so thought that I had nothing to lose. I began using it at 18 weeks of pregnancy as the manufacturer recommends for an hour in the morning (I set the alarm an hour earlier to put it on in bed!!) and an hour after work. I soon grew to love this time as it was a part of the day that I could really focus on the pregnancy and the baby. At about week 20, the baby started to kick and soon would move and squirm during our `sessions’ which was wonderful so if nothing else I felt that I was really bonding with the baby. I wasn’t religious in using it and missed the odd lesson but fit them in whenever I could.

My baby arrived on his due date and at birth his eyes were wide open and he was alert observing his surroundings. He latched on fairly easily straight away and has been a good feeder ever since. His sleeping patterns were fairly sociable from the off and he slept through the night from about 3 months which I believe is unusual! He is developing well and I get many comments about how he seems advanced for his age. He is my first baby so I don’t know but certainly he seems to be slightly ahead of his buddies of the same age from the antenatal classes.

It’s hard to say whether or not BabyPlus is the reason that our little boy is doing so well but is does seem a coincidence and having convinced other friends of it’s benefits and who have used it they seem to be sharing the same experience. I think that there are many factors that contribute to a happy baby but I would say that if I was to have another child I would certainly use BabyPlus again because I feel it would be unfair not to give my other children the same start. It may be on the pricy side but it is well worth the investment giving the amount of research that is reported to have gone into the product, and certainly my experience is that it does seem to work! If I had another child, I would not want to miss out on giving them the same opportunity.

I don’t think buying this is about trying to make your baby a genius but if you are interested in giving your baby a bit of a headstart, surely it’s worth a go!

There’s lots of useful info on the BabyPlus website about the scientific research which is great if you need a bit more convincing!"

As usual, "our" parents are the very best! 


Infant Sleeping Schedule

Friday, June 18, 2010 by Cindy Wallander
Prenatal sleep states remain undisturbed by BabyPlus stimulation.

Expectant mothers and fathers have asked how their baby will sleep once born.  We understand that the idea of baby stimulation could lead to that question.  BabyPlus babiesYour baby will have great sleep habits! have wonderful sleep patterns; plus, they have an increased ability to self-sooth.

The sound level to the baby is strictly controlled for both pitch and volume.  Dr. Brent Logan spent 25 years studying the normal environment of the developing baby, and BabyPlus is carefully designed to present sounds for the prenatal infant at a very safe but audible level.  

The baby hears the sounds of its mother's heartbeat at approximately 95 decibels, as loud as a rock band, constantly.   Moreover, normal sounds in a mother's environment--television, radio, loud remarks, traffic--reach the fetus at volumes similar to that of her heartbeat yet the baby still sleeps through this noise most of the time, even though its brain is always monitoring these sounds.  

BabyPlus is designed to produce an external sound of about  90 to 95  decibels, which is then reduced by 30-35 decibels as it is filtered through the mother's abdominal wall, reaching the unborn infant at  60-65 decibels, well below the sound level of the mother's blood.  BabyPlus therefore has a scientifically engineered sound ceiling which is always less than that of the natural sonic environment of the womb.  More than 150,000+ families worldwide have attested to its safety and effectiveness.  Overstimulation does not occur because, like the maternal bloodpulse, this sound is so familiar to the developing baby. The tones are natural, and the sound level is appropriate.  

Remember - the womb is not a "soundproof booth."  Your baby is hearing everything all day long.  The purpose of prenatal stimulation is to use a sound your baby is very familiar with - the mother's heartbeat - during the critical period in prenatal development. 

Press Release - BabyPlus on You Tube!

Monday, March 9, 2009 by Cindy Wallander

For Immediate Release


(Indianapolis, IN- March 9, 2009) —BabyPlus (www.babyplus.com), the first US-patented prenatal education system, features three real-life BabyPlus stories on YouTube that have reached 2,100 views in the last year. BabyPlus is an audio device that introduces patterns of sound to prenatal children that mimics the maternal heartbeat, creating prenatal learning as the baby differentiates the BabyPlus sound from the mother’s heartbeat. The videos feature the BabyPlus stories of three real-life families who experienced the positive impact that BabyPlus had on the development of their children.

 

“Mothers take prenatal vitamins to help their babies grow and now they also use BabyPlus to give their children a head start in cognitive development. These real-life stories are the ultimate testimony to the benefits of BabyPlus,” says Lisa Jarrett, BabyPlus President. “More than 150,000 families worldwide have used BabyPlus and have seen the results, reporting their newborns are more calm and alert at birth and sleep better as they grow.”



The videos available on YouTube, featuring three real-life families who describe their experiences with the BabyPlus System, have reached 2,100 views in the last 12 months. Each video demonstrates the way these families became familiar with BabyPlus, their inclusion of this prenatal education system into their pregnancies and the results. The stories include:


Click here to watch the video of the Cooper family!• The Coopers have ten BabyPlus babies throughout their extended family. The family expresses the calming effect that prenatal learning has had on their children.


Click here to watch the video of the Barbier family!• The Barbiers describe the positive effects that BabyPlus has had on their children reaching developmental milestones earlier.



Click here to watch the video of the Smith family!• The Smiths were influenced by the husband of actress, Nicole Ari-Parker, who used BabyPlus throughout her pregnancy.



You can also find these videos, along with more information about the BabyPlus Prenatal Education System, at www.babyplus.com, where BabyPlus is also available for purchase for $149.

Click "buy now" to go directly to our website to purchase this gift of a lifetime for your child!

Buy BabyPlus for your developing baby now!


BabyPlus - Sounds - Part 2

Tuesday, February 24, 2009 by Cindy Wallander

So, why not music? 

In short, all babies are exposed to speech and music, but these pass by them as white noise, absolutely meaningless. 

Every unborn child experiences a sonic environment - outside voices, television, radio, CDs - all passing through the abdominal wall (which lowers their volume by about 35 decibels, and muffles these sounds . . . like listening underwater), but most dominant is mother's blood pulsing constantly past the womb at 95 decibels, loud as a rock band; even so, the fetus sleeps about 80 percent of each day.

To promote a beginning pattern recognition, such basic stimuli must be very simple and repetitive, something which neither speech nor music can accomplish.  The repetitive curriculum of the mother's heartbeat sounds is exactly what your baby needs to begin prenatal learning.

Music is wonderful for infants and children.  As prenatal enrichment, however, it has proved ineffective.  Music is too random and complex, while the spoken word is not understandable for an unborn child.  Instead, the recurring patterns of BabyPlus--based upon the maternal heartbeat's tone--and the changes in rhythm are the most beneficial sonic influences.  BabyPlus may sound repetitive to adults, but it is optimal as the earliest form of learning . . . an age-appropriate natural curriculum.

Click on our logo to go directly to our site to read more about the BabyPlus curriculum and how it will benefit your baby - for a lifetime of learning!

Heartbeat sounds prenatally for a lifetime of learning!

The Womb is the Perfect Classroom - Part One

Wednesday, January 21, 2009 by Julie Louly

The Womb is the Perfect Classroom - Part One - How BabyPlus Works

Click here to learn more about making your womb the perfect classroom!Prenatal learning is as vital to a child’s cognitive development as a prenatal vitamin is to enriching a baby’s physical development.  The BabyPlus Prenatal Education System is a patented developmentally appropriate curriculum that introduces patterns of sound to the prenatal child in the only language he understands-the maternal heartbeat.  BabyPlus encourages simple, early sound discrimination through a 16-week curriculum.  The expectant mom wears the unit an hour in the morning and an hour in the afternoon or evening beginning the lessons at around the 18th week of pregnancy.  BabyPlus babies sleep through the night more readily, nurse better, and reach developmental milestones earlier.  BabyPlus babies also demonstrate improved school readiness.  The BabyPlus Prenatal Education System is the only product of its kind on the market.   The system offers parents the opportunity to give their baby a head start on early learning. 

BabyPlus "Sound Bite"

Monday, December 22, 2008 by Cindy Wallander

Everyone seems to be so very busy these days that a long description of BabyPlus can be too time consuming.  I believe I have perfected the "sound bite" description, which I used over the weekend at two holiday parties.

BabyPlus is a prenatal educational tool used during pregnancy.
• The sounds are patterned after the mother’s heartbeat, which is the only true sound a baby can
understand in the womb.
• It is the only product of its kind on the market.
• Moms from around the world who use BabyPlus during their pregnancy say their babies are calm,
sleep better at a young age and reach developmental milestones earlier.

I am always pleasantly surprised to hear someone remark that she has used the system.  Our message of the stages of fetal development, prenatal education, learning in the womb, and the cognitive development of each baby is becoming more and more well-known.

Please click on our logo to leant more about the BabyPlus Prenatal Education System - beyond the "sound-bite."

beyond the BabyPlus "sound bite"

What about music or speaking?

Thursday, September 25, 2008 by Cindy Wallander

Isn't music, speaking, or reading to your baby just as effective as BabyPlus?


No
.  Every unborn child experiences a sonic environment - outside voices, television, radio, CDs, all passing through the abdominal wall (which lowers their volume by about 35 decibels, and muffles these sounds . . . like listening underwater), but most dominant is mother's blood pulsing constantly past the womb at 95 decibels, loud as a rock band; even so, the fetus sleeps about 80 percent of each day. Researchers note that to promote our beginning pattern recognition, such basic stimuli must be very simple and repetitive, something which neither speech nor music can accomplish; even nursery tunes - let alone Mozart - are simply too complex to register, and standard comparative clinical trials verify this consistently. However, the BabyPlus tones increase in speed and tonal complexity by increments, what is called a curriculum (that which all education is based upon), and nothing except these slight changes in the maternal bloodpulse can appropriately provide the most elementary patterns at this early stage - especially important since all information after a full-term birth will never be acquired through the comprehensive process which BabyPlus utilizes.


In short, all babies are exposed to speech and music, but these pass by them as white noise, absolutely meaningless - which has been repeatedly verified in independent testing when compared with BabyPlus and a control group; this breakthrough discovery is reported fully in peer-reviewed academic journals, as BabyPlus has become the only effective and safe way to prenatally enrich your unborn child's forming cognitive, empathic, and creative skills.

Every Mother's Wish

Monday, August 18, 2008 by BabyPlus Sales Team
     A baby who sleeps through the night- that would be wonderful!  I remember when I had my 3 children. During all of the stages through pregnancy with my first child I thought about the delivery and how I would handle it. However, for my second and third child, during the pregnancy trimesters, I thought about the sleep deprivation that came after delivery and how I wished that those second and third babies would sleep through the night at an early age.  I, unfortunately, had my babies before BabyPlus was available.  Now, I know how I would be able to ensure that my baby would have a good chance of sleeping through the night at an early age.  Parents who have used BabyPlus report that one of the key benefits is their baby's ability to self soothe.  This means that the baby can calm herself down thus leading to better sleeping patterns, early on. This is especially important if you have other children or are planning to go back to work and can't afford the sleep deprivation that frequently comes with new babies.  So, give yourself and your baby the benefit of a early infant sleeping schedule that you both can enjoy.

Posted by LJ Russell

The Universal Language - The Mothers Heartbeat

Tuesday, April 29, 2008 by Julie Louly
The one true universal language is the Mother's heartbeat sounds. I find this a fascinating concept. Think about it. In all the stages of Fetal Development the child hears many things.  However, only one thing is consistent - your heartbeat. To be able to enhance infant development with these sounds and impact early brain development during pregnancy is truly amazing. And it is not something reserved for the American or Japanese or Chinese child. It is available to all children all over the world. BabyPlus delivers these sounds and the benefits of these sounds to prenatal children all over the world. To have a better breast feeding baby and a baby with an improved infant sleeping pattern is something available to all cultures. Baby Stimulation in the early brain development stage during pregnancy could not be safer with the BabyPlus Prenatal Education System.

The womb is not a "sound proof booth."

Thursday, March 6, 2008 by Cindy Wallander

Infant Sleeping Schedule

Prenatal sleep states remain undisturbed by BabyPlus stimulation.

Expectant mothers and fathers have asked how their baby will sleep once born.  We understand that the idea of baby stimulation could lead to that question.  BabyPlus babies have wonderful sleep patterns; plus, they have an increased ability to self-sooth.

The sound level to the baby is strictly controlled for both pitch and volume.  Dr. Brent Logan spent 25 years studying the normal environment of the developing baby, and BabyPlus is carefully designed to present sounds for the prenatal infant at a very safe but audible level. 

The baby hears the sounds of its mother's heartbeat at approximately 95 decibels, as loud as a rock band, constantly. Moreover, normal sounds in a mother's environment--television, radio, loud remarks, traffic--reach the fetus at volumes similar to that of her heartbeat yet the baby still sleeps through this noise most of the time, even though its brain is always monitoring these sounds. 

BabyPlus is designed to produce an external sound of about  90 to 95  decibels, which is then reduced by 30-35 decibels as it is filtered through the mother's abdominal wall, reaching the unborn infant at  60-65 decibels, well below the sound level of the mother's blood.  BabyPlus therefore has a scientifically engineered sound ceiling which is always less that the natural sonic environment of the womb.  More than 150,000+ families worldwide have attested to its safety and effectiveness. 

Over stimulation does not occur because, like the maternal blood pulse, this sound is so familiar to the developing baby.  The tones are natural, and the sound level is appropriate. 

Remember - the womb is not a "soundproof booth."  Your baby is hearing everything all day long.  The purpose of prenatal stimulation is to use a sound your baby is very familiar with - the mother's heartbeat - during the critical period in prenatal development. 

Sounds and Safety of BabyPlus

Tuesday, January 22, 2008 by Cindy Wallander

Regarding questions about the SOUNDS of the BabyPlus Prenatal Education system, I want to give the following information...


Some experts say that a baby’s hearing develops as early as 14 weeks, others say 16-18 weeks. We feel that by the 18th week of gestation a baby’s hearing is fully functional, and that is why you will begin using the BabyPlus at 18 weeks.


During the prenatal months, your child hears many different sounds. What we have learned is that music is wonderful for infants and children post-natally. As methods of prenatal enrichment, however, we believe it is not very effective. Research has shown that the fluid surrounding the baby muffles all but the simplest sounds. Music is too random and complex, and the spoken word is too hard to understand. The baby has no frame of reference for those sounds. That is the amazing idea behind BabyPlus - the sound your child hears all day every day is your heartbeat! Over the course of the sixteen lessons, your baby will hear your heartbeat and the slightly different sound pattern of the BabyPlus, and begin comparing/contrasting those two sounds - learning has begun! Incredible!


The sound level to the baby is strictly controlled for both pitch and volume. Dr. Logan spent many years studying the normal environment of the developing baby, and BabyPlus® is carefully designed to present sounds to the prenatal infant at a very safe but audible level. Normal sounds in a mother's environment--television, loud remarks, traffic--reach the fetus at volumes similar to that of her heartbeat yet the baby still sleeps through it most of the time, even though its brain is monitoring the sound. BabyPlus is designed to produce an external sound of about 105 decibels, which is then reduced by 30-35 decibels as it is filtered through the mother's abdominal wall, reaching the unborn infant at 70-75 decibels, well below the sound level of the mother's blood.


BabyPlus therefore has a scientifically engineered sound ceiling which is always less that the natural sonic environment of the womb. More than 100,000 families worldwide have attested to its safety and effectiveness. Overstimulation does not occur because the sound is so familiar to the developing baby. The tones are natural, and the sound level is safe. Of the 100,000 BabyPlus children born to date, there has never been a case of hearing damage--or any other detrimental effect from the product. Think about it - your baby is not in a sound-proof booth! He or she is hearing so much during the prenatal months - why not use sounds that are scientifically proven and researched???


I know this sounds very "science-y" - but the truth is, the BabyPlus is an unbelievable way of enabling your child to have the ability to learn easily and well throughout his or her life. What parent wouldn't want these benefits?


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