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What parents are asking
Real answers to the most common worries - backed by pediatric guidelines.
My Baby Isn't Walking
The normal range for first independent steps is huge - anywhere from 9 to 18 months, and all of it is considered typical development. Many parents feel pressure when they see other babies walking early, but a baby who walks at 15 months is just as healthy as one who walks at 10 months.
Read moreMy Baby Isn't Talking
First words typically appear between 10 and 14 months, but there's enormous variation in what's normal. What matters most at first is whether your baby is communicating - pointing, gesturing, making eye contact, and babbling with different sounds - even if actual words haven't arrived yet.
Read moreMy Baby Isn't Crawling
Here's something that surprises many parents: crawling is not actually a required developmental milestone. The CDC removed it from their milestone checklist because many healthy babies skip crawling entirely and go straight to pulling up, cruising, or walking. If your baby is finding ways to move and explore, they're doing great.
Read moreMy Baby Isn't Rolling Over
Most babies roll between 4 and 6 months, but some perfectly healthy babies don't roll until later - or skip rolling entirely. If your baby is engaging with you, bearing some weight on their arms during tummy time, and meeting other milestones, this is likely just their own timeline.
Read moreMy Baby Isn't Responding to Their Name
Babies typically begin responding to their name consistently between 9 and 12 months. Before that, responses can be hit-or-miss, especially when your baby is focused on something interesting. The first step is always to check hearing, because hearing issues are common, treatable, and can look a lot like other concerns.
Read moreGreen Poop in Babies
Green poop in babies is almost always completely normal and nothing to worry about. It can be caused by iron in formula or supplements, a foremilk-hindmilk balance in breastfeeding, dietary changes, or simply normal variation in how quickly food moves through the gut.
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