Most babies start sleeping all night between two and four months, according to study

When the baby will sleep all night is a question that many parents ask themselves. The answer is not a prediction that can be made with a magic ball even by guiding us on how other babies of the same age as ours sleep, because every child is a world.

However, a study conducted in New Zealand with 75 children whose results have been published in the review Pediatrics states that Most babies start sleeping all night between two and four months.

It is illogical to think that a baby starts to sleep all night automatically when he turns two months or three months. Sleep is a process that evolves and adapts to the needs of rest and development of each baby.

It will depend on how you feed, the stimuli you have received during the day and many other things that make a baby not sleep the same as another one of the same age.

Returning to the investigation, it is concluded that there are children who do not sleep from the pull until they reach the first year. At this age, 87 percent of babies slept five hours in a row, 86 percent eight hours and 73 percent slept 10 to 6 (coinciding with family sleep schedule).

Do not believe that it is strange that your children do not sleep all night at four months, I would say they are the least, or even at the end of the year. In fact, until 2 or 3 years old, even if they are less frequent, it is normal for there to be nighttime awakenings.

Generalizing in this way about the dream of babies does not seem constructive, since as I said before, each child has its own rhythms. Once we understand why babies wake up so much at night we understand that night wakings are healthy and good for their development.