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Seattle Mama Doc - Dr Wendy Sue Swanson

Dr. Wendy Sue Swanson MAMA DOC

Prevention, Pediatrics, Technology & Innovation

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Toddler

Cocoon A Newborn, Only An Email Away

April 5, 2012 28 Comments

This week, Washington State declared that whooping cough (pertussis) has reached epidemic levels. Since the beginning of the year, we’ve had more than 600 documented cases in the state, a dramatic increase since last year. The increase puts our new babies at risk. In clinic I’ve been urging new parents to cocoon their babies. That is, […]

All Grandparents Need A Tdap

March 16, 2012 35 Comments

Some of my best friends are about to have a baby, the due date only a few weeks away. I’m teary thinking about it as my excitement for her arrival exceeds the speed limit. They asked my opinion this week for getting their extended family immunized in light of the recent Whooping Cough (pertussis) outbreak in […]

Toddler Sleep: Early Morning Awakenings

February 29, 2012 29 Comments

Every week in clinic families ask me about strategies to help with children who awake before the sun is up. We all thrive with improved, uninterupted, prolonged periods of sleep at night. Particularly on those Saturdays where an extra hour or two of sleep can be life-sustaining for exhausted parents to toddlers and preschoolers. Because […]

Toddler Sleep: 4 Reasons Toddlers Wake Up At Night

February 28, 2012 554 Comments

There is a lot of writing online about how to get your baby to sleep through the night during infancy but not as much expertise to help those of us with toddlers and preschoolers who wake a number of times. Between age 2 and 3 when O was released from crib jail and moved to […]

Reading A Growth Chart: Mama Doc 101

February 20, 2012 11 Comments

Parents, pediatricians, and nurses have been using growth charts since the late 1970’s to track growth in their infants and children. The charts were revised back in the year 2000 as the data for the first charts (from a small study in Ohio) that didn’t accurately reflect the cultural and ethnic diversity of our communities. […]

Half & Half

February 18, 2012 4 Comments

I had a great trip to the grocery store today with the boys. Life has been so hectic these past few weeks, we haven’t had weekend time for a leisurely trip to the aisles of fruit and fondue. Today, we had the luxury of time, a list, and a proper plan. They weren’t hungry (and […]

Pacifiers: A Love Affair Worth Having?

February 13, 2012 22 Comments

Pacifiers, a love affair worth having? It’s up to you, of course. Pacifiers are hotly debated among some parents, some pediatricians, some lactation consultants, and some dentists. I say some, as I believe not all clinicians have strong impressions/judgments. That’s because pacifiers don’t cause excessive harm. Yet most parents agree on one thing: they all […]

Measles At The Super Bowl

February 10, 2012 7 Comments

Like the makings of a Hollywood movie, I learned this week that there were an estimated 200,000 people in Super Bowl Village this past weekend in Indiana. Amongst them on February 4th, was one (or maybe two) child with infectious measles. Fortunately, the child didn’t attend the game. Yet, measles is highly contagious. The period of infectivity […]

An App For That?

February 8, 2012 19 Comments

Stop what you’re doing to read this The New England Journal of Medicine perspective by Dr Doug Diekema. It’s about vaccines, opportunities for health, and physician obligation. Written for physicians, it also speaks loudly to parents and includes a few very essential points. The whole time I read the article, my thoughts kept leaping to […]

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Recent Posts

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