For Him · Baby Care
Nobody is born knowing how to change a nappy or settle a screaming newborn. Here’s everything you need to feel genuinely capable from day one.
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The anxiety most dads feel before their baby arrives is almost universal - and it’s almost always wrong. The skills needed to care for a newborn aren’t complex. They just feel unfamiliar. Nappies, baths, feeds, soothing: all of these can be learned in an afternoon and mastered within days.
The real advantage of doing these things yourself - rather than watching your partner do them - is confidence. Every nappy you change, every bath you give, every time you successfully settle a crying baby yourself builds the kind of practical trust that makes you genuinely useful for the next eighteen years.
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Nappies
A newborn will need 8-12 nappy changes a day. That sounds like a lot. It isn’t once you’ve done it a few times - a nappy change takes about two minutes when you know what you’re doing.
Step by step:
Red, sore skin around the nappy area. Usually caused by prolonged wetness. Change frequently, apply barrier cream at each change, and let baby have some nappy-free time each day. If it doesn’t improve in 3 days or develops yellow spots, see your GP.
Bathing
Newborns don’t need a bath every day - two to three times a week is plenty. Until the umbilical cord stump falls off (usually 1-3 weeks), stick to “top and tail” washes rather than full submersion baths.
A baby can drown in 2 inches of water in less than a minute. If the doorbell goes, bring baby with you. Get everything you need ready before you start the bath.
Feeding
You can’t breastfeed but you can do everything else. Bring baby to your partner during night feeds so she doesn’t have to get up. Wind baby afterwards. Change the pre-feed nappy. Make sure she has water, snacks, and her phone within reach during feeds - breastfeeding sessions can last 40+ minutes, especially in the early weeks.
Burping: hold baby upright against your shoulder and rub or pat the back in circular motions. Over-the-knee works too - baby face-down across your lap, supporting the head. Give it a couple of minutes after feeds.
This is where you can be fully hands-on from day one. Make up formula fresh each time - never batch-make and reheat. Use freshly boiled water that’s cooled to at least 70°C (let it stand for 30 minutes after boiling).
Soothing
Newborns cry. A lot. In the early weeks it’s essentially their only form of communication. The first job is to run through the checklist of likely causes. The second is to try different soothing techniques until something works.
These are sometimes called the “5 S’s” (Dr Harvey Karp’s method). They work best in combination.
If you’ve tried everything and baby won’t stop crying and you can feel yourself getting overwhelmed - put baby down in a safe place (cot, on their back) and step away for two minutes. A crying baby is safe. A baby shaken in frustration is not. Take a breath. Come back calmer. This is not failure - this is good parenting.
Settling
Safe sleep is the non-negotiable here. Beyond that, there is no single method that works for all babies - finding what works for yours is part of the early parenting experience.
Newborns sleep 14-17 hours a day in short bursts. They have no day/night rhythm yet - that develops around 3-4 months. You’re not doing anything wrong.
Baby Care Guides
Step-by-step for top-and-tail and full baths, plus cord care.
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Over the shoulder, across the knee, sitting up - the positions worth knowing.
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The five most common causes and the techniques that actually help.
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SIDS risk reduction, safer sleeping positions, and what not to buy.
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Why it matters, how it works, and how to make the most of the early weeks.
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Read the guide →Medical disclaimer: The content on this website is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the guidance of your doctor, midwife, or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read on this website.