El diario de crianza
How Long Should You Keep Outlet Covers Installed?
Approximately 2,400 children are treated in U.S. emergency rooms each year for electrical outlet injuries (CPSC). That number is small enough that many parents assume the risk doesn’t apply to their family, and large enough that it absolutely might. The...
Outdoor Play Equipment Safety: Swings Slides and Sandboxes for Toddlers
Every summer, I watch parents at the neighborhood park do the same thing: they settle onto a bench, pull out their phones, and assume the equipment is safe because it’s there. It isn’t always. For toddlers specifically, the gap between...
Small Parts and Choking Hazards: Organizing Toys by Age in the Playroom
You turn around for thirty seconds and your toddler is sitting happily on the playroom floor, mouthing something that belongs to her older sibling’s building set. No crying, no choking, just a small plastic piece disappearing behind curious lips while...
How to Baby Proof Electrical Outlets in Older Homes
The outlet in my living room was about eight inches off the floor. I didn’t notice until my older daughter started pulling herself up to stand, at which point that little two-slot receptacle was exactly at eye level for a...
Car Seat Safety by Age: Rear-Facing Forward-Facing and Booster Guide
Car crashes are a leading cause of death for children in the United States. The car seat your child sits in, and whether it fits them correctly for their age and size, is one of the most consequential safety decisions...
Baby Proofing for Families Who Co-Parent in Two Homes
Children don’t experience a "transition period" when they move between homes. They just arrive, curious and fast, in a space that may or may not be ready for them.Co-parenting across two households is already logistically complex. Add a mobile infant...
Teaching Toddlers Stair Safety: When and How to Practice
Roughly one child every six minutes is treated for a stair-related injury in a U.S. emergency room (Nationwide Children’s Hospital analysis of CPSC NEISS data, 1999–2008). Stairs are everywhere. And at some point, your toddler is going to want to...
Baby Proofing for Parents Who Travel for Work
For parents who travel regularly for work, one of the heaviest parts of the mental load is knowing your child is spending time in a home you can’t fully control.The good news: you can control more than you think. Not...
Pediatrician Baby Proofing Advice: What Doctors Actually Recommend
Most parents leave the pediatrician’s office with a growth chart and a vaccine schedule. The baby-proofing conversation, if it happens at all, gets squeezed into the last two minutes of a well visit. But pediatricians have strong, evidence-based opinions about...









