Keeping baby warm after birth
Normal newborn temperature is 36.5–37.5°C under arm
- Babies lose heat very quickly, eg from a cold room, air touching the baby's skin, lying on a cool surface or evaporation
- Cold will stress baby and may cause respiratory distress (breathing problems) or hypoglycaemia (low BGL). Also makes resuscitation more difficult
Risk factors for low temperatures
If any risk factors present — see Newborn care
- Low birth weight
- Preterm
- Sick, especially breathing problems
- Resuscitated straight after birth
- Mother with diabetes
- Born before arriving at clinic and has become cold
Do not
- Do not use hot water bottle
- Do not overheat baby
- Do not bath baby until temperature normal — most don’t need a bath
What you need
- Warm room for baby to arrive into — turn off air conditioner and put on heating just before birth
- If can't turn off air conditioner and it is warm outside — open doors and windows
- Lots of clean, pre-warmed towels, sheets and blankets — warm by putting in sun, wrapping around hot water bottle or put near heater
- Bubble wrap, cling wrap
- Thick clear plastic bag — if baby thought to be preterm or low birth weight
What you do
- Best way to warm baby is skin against mother’s skin
- Keep baby’s head covered — most heat is lost from the head
- Cover back of baby with bunny rug, sheet or clothing
- As soon as baby born put onto mother’s chest, skin-to-skin and dry thoroughly with warm dry towel — Figure 3.30
- Remove wet towel and put new warm one over baby’s head and body, as baby lies on mother
- If mother not able to hold baby and baby is pink and breathing well
- Ask helper/relative to put naked baby under their clothes, against skin on their chest (chest-to-chest). Add layers of bubble wrap/towels around baby's body and cover head with hat or bunny rug
- OR use clean, warm towel to wrap baby as snugly as possible, making sure head is fully covered to middle of brow — Figure 3.31 THEN wrap body (not head) again in bubble wrap/cling wrap and give to helper to hold and watch over
Figure 3.30
Figure 3.31
Figure 3.32
- After placenta delivered and mother comfortable — take baby’s axillary temp (under arm).
- Make sure skin dry and thermometer is snugly between folds of skin not clothing
- Wait until baby warm and settled with no signs of distress before weighing naked — have all equipment ready before unwrapping baby
- Keep skin-to-skin with mother for as long as possible
- Encourage first breastfeed within first hour — Figure 3.32 —baby will warm up faster after a good feed
- If unable to breastfeed — help mother express some colostrum and syringe/drop into baby's mouth
Babies thought to be preterm or low birth weight
- Do not dry baby
- Place immediately in thick clear plastic bag or plastic wrap
- OR alternatively if mother and baby well enough — place baby on mother's chest between breasts — Figure 3.30 — cover both with plastic wrap then warm blanket
- Keep head out and body completely covered — cover head with small hat
- Continue to closely observe temperature, breathing and heart rate
- Aim for normal temperature — 36.5–37.5°C under arm — avoid overheating
Place baby on mother’s chest as shown then cover