| | |  | Nursery | Home » » Basic Comfort Resting Up with Heart Beat | | | | | | | Description: | | The Resting Up with Heartbeat Sleep Positioner is a step up from the Resting Up with the patented heartbeat sensation. It has three easy settings. Normal mode creates heartbeat vibrations for 10 minutes before fading. Listening mode will be still until baby cries, then turn on for 10 minutes before fading. Combo mode begins in Normal, then fades to Listening mode and turns on when needed. Includes two adjustable, removable wedges filled with AirCair Foam and covered with FloThru fabric. The mat is filled with AirCare Foam to maximize breathability and contours baby with a layer of FloThru fabric designed to minimized sweating. | | | Product Details: | | | Product Length:
| 12.6 inches | | Product Width:
| 8.7 inches | | Product Height:
| 5.3 inches | | Product Weight:
| 1.4 pounds | | Package Length:
| 12.6 inches | | Package Width:
| 8.7 inches | | Package Height:
| 5.3 inches | | Package Weight:
| 1.4 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 10 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
 Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
FlimsyJan 19, 2009 I got this for my daughter when she was one month old because I noticed how well she slept on my chest on an incline (but I can't do that as often as she wants me to!). Well, it didn't do the trick. The incline is too little, the heartbeat isn't convincing and the two pieces that hold the baby on either side were not substantial enough to feel snuggly. The whole thing is too flimsy. The heartbeat function is located in one of the side thingies that hold the baby in place. I don't think she could even feel it as the baby's body does not apply enough pressure in that direction. I think the heartbeat should be in the base so that the baby is laying on top of it and the weight of her body will press down on it making it easy to sense. With the heartbeat on the side there is almost no pressure being applied from the baby's body, therefore, I don't think they can sense the heartbeat.
Maybe it would have worked better had she slept in it from the moment she was born instead of getting used to sleeping on my chest with my heartbeat.
4 of 11 found the following review helpful:
American Academy of Pediatrics and Consumer Reports Informs us...Nov 11, 2008
"...The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) advises parents and caregivers to remove all "pillow-like soft products" from cribs, while the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) advises that "soft objects, such as pillows, quilts, comforters, sheepskins, stuffed toys, and other gas-trapping objects should be kept out of an infant's sleeping environment." More specifically, the AAP advises that "Although various devices have been developed to maintain sleep position or to reduce the risk of rebreathing, such devices are not recommended, because none have been tested sufficiently to show efficacy or safety."
While the cause of infant death can be difficult to determine, our reporters found documentation of at least one death attributed by a New York City medical examiner to be caused by asphyxia by obstruction of nose and mouth by a foam positioning device. "Our advice is to keep the crib bare," says R. David Pittle, Consumers Union's former senior vice president for technical policy. "The only thing that should be in a crib is a sheet, a mattress, a child, and a blanket.""
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Heartbeat in wrong locationSep 04, 2008 I got this for my daughter when she was one month old because I noticed how well she slept on my chest on an incline (but I can't do that as often as she wants me to!). Well, it didn't do the trick. The incline is too little, the heartbeat isn't convincing and the two pieces that hold the baby on either side were not substantial enough to feel snuggly. The whole thing is too flimsy. The heartbeat function is located in one of the side thingies that hold the baby in place. I don't think she could even feel it as the baby's body does not apply enough pressure in that direction. I think the heartbeat should be in the base so that the baby is laying on top of it and the weight of her body will press down on it making it easy to sense. With the heartbeat on the side there is almost no pressure being applied from the baby's body, therefore, I don't think they can sense the heartbeat.
Maybe it would have worked better had she slept in it from the moment she was born instead of getting used to sleeping on my chest with my heartbeat.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Sides won't stay putAug 30, 2008 Loved the heartbeat feature but as my son got bigger the sides were hard to keep on as his body was too much to hold them.
so parents can sleepAug 26, 2008 Has been a real sleep saver for parents of a fussy fussy baby. It settles him back down with the "cry sensing" setting. But it has to be put right at the head of the bassinet or they scoot right off the top of the wedge...and then they really get mad.
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