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Newborn Essentials

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Simple support for babies, toddlers & new parents

Newborn Essentials

A calm, practical guide to feeding, nappies, safe sleep, settling, health checks, parent recovery and urgent signs in the first 12 weeks.

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Quick summary

The calm version

The first 12 weeks are a transition for babies and parents. Newborns feed often, sleep in short bursts, communicate through cues and crying, and need safe sleep every time. Nappies, colour, alertness and feeding are important clues. Parents need food, fluids, rest, practical help and support without shame. Early help is better than waiting when something feels wrong.

Feed oftenBreast, bottle or mixed feeding can all need support.
Sleep safelyBack, face clear, flat safe space.
RespondCrying is communication, not manipulation.
Watch cluesNappies, colour, feeding and alertness matter.
Act earlyNewborn red flags need prompt help.

What matters most

  • Put baby on their back for every sleep, with head and face uncovered, in their own safe sleep space in the same room as an adult caregiver for at least the first 6 months. [1][2]
  • Many newborns feed 8-12 or more times in 24 hours. Crying can be a late hunger cue. [3][4]
  • Baby under 3 months with a temperature of 38°C or higher needs urgent medical assessment. [5][6]
  • If feeding, nappies, jaundice, breathing, colour, alertness, parent recovery or mental health worries you, seek help early.

Support that fits real life

This guide is for many kinds of families

Use what fits your family

Newborn care advice should support your family, not shame it. Culture, language, work patterns, birth recovery, feeding choices, finances, housing, support and baby health all shape what is realistic.

Family realityWhat mattersPractical adjustment
Breastfeeding, formula-feeding or mixed-feedingBaby is fed safely, monitored and supported. Parents are not shamed.Ask for feeding help early, whichever method you use.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander familiesFamily, kin, community, Country, culture and culturally safe care can support wellbeing.Ask for Aboriginal health, midwifery, child health or community-controlled services where available.
Culturally diverse and bilingual familiesHome language and family traditions matter.Translate scripts into natural family language; keep safe sleep and urgent signs consistent.
Single parents, shift-working families and limited supportPerfect routines are not realistic.Prioritise safe sleep, feeding, parent rest blocks and a short support list.
Premature babies or babies needing extra careIndividual advice matters more than generic timing.Use your neonatal, paediatric, GP, midwife or child health plan.
Exhausted, anxious or unsure parentsNot knowing is normal. Needing help is normal.Use scripts, support lines and urgent signs pages without waiting for things to be severe.

Unlock the full PDF

The full guide includes 36 pages, printable tools including hospital discharge checklist, nappy tracker, safe sleep checklist, urgent symptoms page, trusted resource links and safety guidance. It is part of the First Years first 2000 days library.

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