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Friday, June 21, 2024

Is This Technology Gone Mad Or An Essential Investment?

 This appeared last week:

We tried the $2000 baby tech dividing parents

There’s one question that many of today’s new parents or parents-to-be are asked over and over again. “Have you got a Snoo?”

For the unenlightened, the Snoo is a controversial $2000 piece of baby tech that automatically soothes your baby to sleep by imitating calming sensations of the womb.

It’s a smart bassinet that can listen for when your baby is fussing or crying and gently rock them, claiming to often calm crying in less than a minute.

The Snoo is like an extra set of arms for new parents – if that set of arms also had in-built Wi-Fi, microphones, white noise speakers and a motor.

The device is the brainchild of American pediatrician Harvey Karp, who wrote the book The Happiest Baby on the Block and pioneered a “5 S” approach to newborn babies: swaddle, side-stomach position, shush, swing and suck.

It’s become wildly popular with many new parents, given its allure of extra sleep for babies and their parents alike. Sleep deprivation can be one of the toughest aspects of parenting.

Snoo’s parent company, Happiest Baby, says Snoo boosts sleep by one to two hours a night from the very first days of life, and that by two to three months of age, most “Snoo babies” sleep more than nine hours a night.

Those are lofty claims and it’s understandable that some parents would be open to shelling out thousands of dollars for a bassinet, even one with plenty of bells and whistles.

A couple of disclaimers: Snoo parent company Happiest Baby sent over a review unit for the purposes of this write-up, so I didn’t pay the RRP. Secondly, I’ve only had one baby so far, who is at this stage a happy little two-month-old boy, so I don’t have a non-Snoo baby to compare.

Our experience, two months in at least, has been pretty remarkable. It’s no silver bullet by any means: our baby can often wake up at random times as all babies do, and sometimes won’t settle in the Snoo at all. But there have been plenty of moments of calm in what can otherwise be a chaotic, stressful and intense time.

One stand-out feature is that the Snoo automatically ramps its rocking speed up or down depending on if the baby is crying or settled, and often it works.

It’s not a cure-all for a crying or fussing baby. But at the same time, it’s hard to put a dollar value on a decent night’s sleep.

It does sometimes feel like a bit of a cheat code, and that’s what can make some parents and some paediatricians feel uncomfortable with it.

And that’s where the controversies come in. Critics say technology such as the Snoo could potentially negatively affect baby bonding, and that it can create bad habits by making the baby too reliant on rocking or white noise.

“I remain somewhat reluctant to have so much gadgetry around a newborn baby,” Australian pediatrician Dr Daniel Golshevsky, better known as Dr Golly, says in a blog post.

The Tweetycam baby monitor was one of our favourites.

“I see countless babies with untreated causes of unsettled behaviour, from colic to eczema, protein intolerance to reflux, and everything in between. I deeply believe that glossing over these treatable conditions does a disservice to babies.

“Prevention is the key, so yes – babies should/can snooze without Snoos.”

Snoo parent company Happiest Baby says, on the other hand, that its device is safe to use, and that it’s easy to wean babies off its sound, swaddle and motion.

It points to research commissioned by the company that has found that Snoo’s rocking, swaddling, and white noise combo works just as well as parents’ soothing to calm fussy babies quickly, and that 90 per cent of nurses surveyed say that Snoo reduces infant fussing.

We haven’t yet reached the weaning phase ourselves, given babies can use Snoo for up to six months and our little one is just two months. On some occasions, we have had to settle him in bassinets that aren’t the Snoo, and we’ve found we are doing all the same things the Snoo does for us – rhythmic rocking, swaying and playing varying levels and types of white noise.

Is it worth the $2000? Like so many baby purchases, you need to keep your expectations in check. It’s not a cure-all for a crying or fussing baby. But at the same time, it’s hard to put a dollar value on a decent night’s sleep. And we’ve been having an increasing number of those in recent weeks.

It’s not for everyone, but the Snoo has been the most useful, high-impact gadget I’ve used in a long time. And I’ve used a lot. Like so many baby purchases, it’s also worth checking out Facebook Marketplace: used Snoos typically retail for around half the price of their brand-new counterparts.

What else did we try?

Australian company Tweetycam’s range of products really impressed and its baby monitor ($239) was our favourite.

The monitor doesn’t use Wi-Fi – meaning no real security concerns– instead relying on a technology called FHHS to send the signal from the camera to the monitor.

The Tweetycam also monitors the room temperature, which is a real plus, and its picture and sound quality are excellent. The monitor itself is easy to use with no smartphone app required, and its battery life lasts about 12 hours. There’s definitely benefit in having a standalone monitor rather than needing to open a smartphone app every time you want to check on your baby.

The Tweetydreams nightlight and sound machine is also strongly worth considering, and at $120 is good value. That product requires a smartphone app, however, which can be a bit fiddly. A basic nightlight that just switches on and off has worked best for us, particularly when trying to bumble your way around in the middle of the night.

Our other favourite baby monitor for those who do prefer a smartphone app is the Lollipop smart baby camera ($319). It’s incredibly versatile, wrapping around the baby’s cot or bassinet, for example, or standing upright on its own. The Lollipop sends you phone notifications whenever it detects a noise, and you can monitor it from any device, be it a smartphone, tablet or desktop. Its picture quality is top-notch and it comes in fun colours such as cotton candy, pistachio and turquoise.
Other things to consider

The Snotty Boss nasal aspirator has been a godsend, and is superior (and decidedly less gross) to the manual method of sucking snot from baby’s nose. I didn’t try a “smart sock” – the baby monitor that tracks pulse and oxygen levels via a sock on the baby’s foot. That felt like a step too far.

And lastly, it might seem obvious to say, but technology is no replacement for human interaction. Parenting is a messy, tricky and intense thing, but no amount of technology will substitute for spending time with your little one. There are just some things that can make it that little bit easier.

https://www.smh.com.au/technology/we-tried-the-2000-baby-tech-dividing-parents-20240528-p5jh5y.html

It seems the life of infants in the 2020’s is a fair bit different from the time I was a nipper!

Amazing…

David.

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