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The Top Ten Reasons To Cloth Diaper

by Susan K. Dodge-Doak
http://www.BabyByYou.com


#1. Your baby's comfort.

Would you like to wear stiff paper (and/or plastic) underwear 24 hours a day? The comfort of cotton and knowing I was providing the best possible comfort for my daughter was the #1 reason I switched to cloth diapers, and why I still love them so much today.

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#2. The environment.

Leave a cleaner world behind for your baby, and your grandchildren. Disposables leave behind an average of 2.7 tons* of non-biodegradable waste (not to mention the waste produced by manufacturing them alone) per child. Compare that to a few dozen cotton diapers, and the responsible choice also becomes an easy one.

#3. Save money.

With disposables, some estimate you spend an average of $2000 per child. Cloth compares at only an average of $150-$350 per child (with the added but minimal cost of electricity and water to launder them). What a great excuse to start a college fund for your baby now, and you can rest assure that your money is being well-spent and not going to "waste" in a land-fill!

#4. Potty training is easier, and happens earlier.

It's a little-known fact that cloth diaper children potty train earlier, and with less effort on their parent's part. This has mostly to do with the fact that when a cloth diaper is wet, they can feel the sensation. Chemical laden disposables can feel so dry, your baby never gets a chance to understand what their body is doing.

#5. Cotton diapers are gel free.

Polyacrylate gel in diapers is a relatively new phenomenon, and no one really knows what the long term effects are. It also leaches moisture from your babies skin. Additionally, disposables are full of dioxins. While non-organic cotton cloth diapers can also have dioxins, they typically are washed out within the first few pre-washes (before your baby will ever wear them), however one-use-only disposables are never rid of them. Additionally, and perhaps the most compelling reason to use cloth diapers, is that disposable diapers containing polyacrylate gel are suspected of exacerbating, and even causing, asthma.

#6. Cloth diapers are so much better looking.

Photographers still traditionally photograph diapered babies in cloth diapers, simply because they are so much cuter! Today they are available in as many prints and colors as their are fabrics available, not to mention the combination of choices you have with twill, flannel, hemp, terry and more. Imagine how many classic baby photos would suddenly become less "quaint" with a baby wrapped in a disposable diaper. I prefer to bring my groceries home in paper and plastic, not my baby!

#7. More fun for Mom.

While not every mother (or woman, for that matter) is a born "shopaholic", most moms I know just love how fun it is to shop for cloth diapers. There are unlimited choices today in cloth diapering, like all-in-one, terry, flannel, contour, prefold, fitted and other contemporary-style cloth diapers. And when you are on a budget, swapping is a great, and economical, way to try the latest new "rage" in cloth diapers.

#8. Better cushioning for baby's bum.

We all know that babies and toddlers have their fair share of bumps and spills! Cushy cotton provides a much softer "landing pad" than a flat paper diaper.

#9. Convenience.

Convenience? Yes, convenience! You'll never have to worry about making another late-night trip to your grocery store for a package of disposable diapers.. You'll never have to hold your nose while emptying and re-bagging one of those complicated "Diaper Genie®" contraptions.. And you'll have approximately two bags less of garbage to haul to the curb every week!

#10. Being a leader is much more fun than being a follower.

Stand out from the crowd and show you care to give your baby the very best, including the way you diaper. It's so much more fun to share the joy of cloth diapering with other mothers (who are usually very curious!), than to waste time clipping the latest coupons for the cheapest disposable paper diaper.

Have you also read The Top Ten Myths About Cloth Diapering?





"Disposable diapers were introduced as recently as 1961, but they now dominate the market, accounting for 80 percent of the diapers used in the United States, with each child using an average total of 5,000 diapers from birth to about 30 months. This adds up to over 16 billion diapers or 2.7 million tons of municipal solid waste nationwide which contributes to the already existing landfill problems, according to the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency)."
-- Luanne Berk, Family.com



** Disposable diaper emissions cause asthma-like symptoms in mice

WESTPORT, Oct 01 (Reuters Health) - Chemical emissions from disposable diapers leads to pulmonary irritation and other symptoms in exposed mice, researchers report in the September-October issue of the Archives of Environmental Health.

Drs. Rosalind C. Anderson and Julius H. Anderson of Anderson Laboratories, West Hartford, Vermont found that following exposure to "..two brands of disposable diapers, many mice exhibited reduced mid-expiratory airflow velocity, sensory irritation and pulmonary irritation." These Effects were increased with repeat exposure.

"Chemical analysis of the emissions revealed several chemicals with documented respiratory toxicity," the authors write.

Exposure to a third brand of disposable diaper did not cause irritation, but negatively affected breathing rate and pattern, while only slight respiratory effects were noted with cloth diapers.

The team concludes that "[d]isposable diapers should be considered as one of the factors that might cause or exacerbate asthmatic conditions."

Dr. Julius Anderson told Reuters Health that further studies "..are needed to determine whether child care products such as disposable diapers are contributing to the worldwide childhood asthma epidemic."

He recommended that in children "..with asthma or other respiratory diseases [one] should probably avoid disposable diapers and use cloth diapers instead...and mothers with asthma should probably avoid handling disposable diapers."

Arch Environ Health 1999;54:353-358.
-Westport Newsroom 203 319 2700

© 1999, Susan Dodge-Doak. May not be reprinted without permission.

About the Author: Susan K. Dodge-Doak is a mother of two children, Madeline Belle, 4 years, & Jackson Sawyer, 16 months. She is the owner BabyByYou. and enjoys running her business as well as staying at home mothering her two children, both born in December.

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