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EXPOSURE OF INFANTS TO OPEN AIR
The respiration of a pure air is at all times, and under all circumstances,
indispensable to the health of the infant. The nursery therefore should be
large, well ventilated, in an elevated part of the house, and so situated as to
admit a free supply both of air and light. For the same reasons, the room in
which the infant sleeps should be large, and the air frequently renewed; for
nothing is so prejudicial to its health as sleeping in an impure and heated
atmosphere. The practice, therefore, of drawing thick curtains closely round the
bed is highly pernicious; they only answer a useful purpose when they defend the
infant from any draught of cold air.
The proper time for taking the infant into the open air must, of course, be
determined by the season of the year, and the state of the weather. "A delicate
infant born late in the autumn will not generally derive advantage from being
carried into the open air, in this climate, till the succeeding spring; and if
the rooms in which he is kept are large, often changed, and well ventilated, he
will not suffer from the confinement, while he will, most probably, escape
catarrhal affections, which are so often the consequence of the injudicious
exposure of infants to a cold and humid atmosphere." If, however, the child is
strong and healthy, no opportunity should be lost of taking it into the open air
at stated periods, experience daily proving that it has the most invigorating
and vivifying influence upon the system. Regard, however, must always be had to
the state of the weather; and to a damp condition of the atmosphere the infant
should never be exposed, as it is one of the most powerful exciting causes of
consumptive disease. The nurse-maid, too, should not be allowed to loiter and
linger about, thus exposing the infant unnecessarily, and for an undue length of
time; this is generally the source of all the evils which accrue from taking the
babe into the open air.
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