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Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Pregnancy

  • 1st Trimester
  • 2nd Trimester
  • 3rd Trimester
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Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Birth

  • Makes crawling-type motions with her legs
  • Enjoys bold colors as vision continues to develop
  • Smiles, frowns and grimaces
  • Reaches for you when she wants attention
Close

Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Crawler

  • Crawls with stomach off the floor
  • May pull self up to stand
  • Begins to self-feed with fingers
  • Begins to use jaw to mash food

Supported Sitter

  • Sits with help or support
  • On tummy, pushes up on arms with straight elbows
  • Moves pureed food forward and backward in mouth with tongue to swallow

Sitter

  • Sits independently
  • Picks up and holds small objects in hands
  • Reaches for food or spoon when hungry
  • Uses upper lip to help clear food off of spoon
Close

Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Crawler

  • Crawls with stomach off the floor
  • May pull self up to stand
  • Begins to self-feed with fingers
  • Begins to use jaw to mash food

Toddler

  • Stands alone and begins to walk alone
  • Feeds self easily with fingers
  • Begins to use fork and spoon
  • Bites through a variety of textures
Close

Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Preschooler

  • Runs well without falling
  • Sits in a booster seat or child seat at family meals
  • Chews more skillfully and efficiently
  • Mastering use of spoon and fork
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Gerber Childrenswear Menus Tailored to Your Child's Development

Doctor's visit: First trimester

Doctor’s visit: First trimester

Your first pregnancy visit to the doctor provides the occasion for one of the most complete physical examinations a healthy person will ever have.

Questions you’ll be asked

  • Last period. Be prepared to give the date of your last period to determine a due date.
  • Your history. The doctor also will want to know about your reproductive history (previous pregnancies, miscarriages, or abortions), any inherited disorders which might be passed on to your child, and any current and past illnesses.

Procedures/tests

  • Your stats. The doctor or nurse will record your height, weight, blood pressure, and pulse.
  • Physical. The doctor will give you a general physical examination, paying special attention to the heart, lungs, abdomen, and pelvis.
  • Pelvic exam. You’ll also have a pelvic examination, which allows the doctor to estimate the size of the uterus and pelvis.
  • Blood test. At your first visit the doctor also will take blood samples to determine:
    • Your blood count, to see whether you’re anemic.
    • Your blood group, in case you need a transfusion.
    • If you have HIV (AIDS) antibodies, which can affect your baby.
    • If you have sickle-cell anemia, thalassemia (a rare blood disorder), or Tay-Sachs disease. These tests are only for those at risk.
    • If you’re immune to rubella (German measles), a disease that can be devastating if contracted early in pregnancy.
    • If a sexually transmitted disease or hepatitis B is present.
  • Urinalysis. Measures the protein and sugar in your urine. This test will detect excess protein, which can be a warning sign of preeclampsia: high blood pressure in pregnancy.
  • Cervical swab. For those who have had herpes. If the herpes virus is active before delivery, your doctor may suggest a cesarean section to avoid the possibility of infecting your baby.
  • Pap smear. To check the cells of the cervix for early signs of cervical cancer.

Scheduling future visits

You’ll see your doctor every month until your 28th week. At that point you’ll need a checkup every three weeks for several visits and then every two weeks. After the 36th week you’ll be seeing your doctor every week until your baby is born.

The important 12th-week visit
Be sure to bring your partner to your 12-week visit, when you’ll be able to hear your baby’s heartbeat. Your doctor will place an electronic amplifying device called a Doptone on your abdomen. This instrument is safe and can be used right in the doctor’s office.

The heartbeat can’t be heard with a regular stethoscope until approximately 20 weeks. What you’ll hear is an earnest little heart pumping at about 140 beats per minute.

Until today your baby may have seemed more like a dream baby—a baby in theory only or just an idea of a child growing inside you. But once you hear the heartbeat, you’ll know your baby is very real.

Did you know?

Your baby’s due date is an educated estimate rather than a sure thing. Some studies show that less than 10% of babies arrive on their due dates—but most arrive within two weeks before or after.

Products

GERBER<sup>®</sup> FIRST ESSENTIALS™ CLEAR VIEW™ Bottles

GERBER® FIRST ESSENTIALS™ CLEAR VIEW™ Bottles

CLEAR VIEW nursers are made of plastic that does not contain BPA.

Learn More