Diapers Like Gdiapers
The Benefits of Cloth Diapers: Good For your Baby. Good For The Environment
Using cloth diapers for the early months of your baby’s life is a good choice for several different reasons. If you look at cost alone, the price of quality fabric diapers is approximately equal to less than three months worth of disposable diapers. If you add the price of the diapers to the cost of laundry for washable diapers to the initial price, you still will be paying less than you would for four months of disposables.
Consumers today are more attuned to the use of environmentally friendly products. Using cloth diapers is more ecologically responsible. Disposable diapers contain materials that don’t decompose, so they stay in landfills indefinitely.
The same plastics and chemicals in disposable diapers that pollute the environment can be harmful to delicate infant skin. Instead of using disposables, you are placing soft cotton fiber against the skin of the baby. This lessens the chance of diaper rash.
A cotton diaper is more comfortable for the child and fits smoothly. You can fold it to fit the size of the baby, so you won’t be dealing with leaks and messes. Safety pins fasten cloth garments, so it’s hard for your baby to accidentally open the diaper.
Pretty and colorful diapers made of cloth are attractive so you won’t need an additional layer of clothing for baby to be well dressed and look good. You are less likely to run out of cotton diapers. There are always clean diapers waiting and on the shelf. With disposables it seems as if you always run out of diapers just about the time that you are leaving the house.
It has been shown that infants wearing wear cloth diapers are likely to be toilet-trained earlier than those who wear disposable diapers. It can happen earlier and with less fuss. Parents will enjoy the benefits to the environment, pocketbook and parenting.
gDiapers at Babies”R”Us
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This entry was posted on Thursday, August 25th, 2011 at 9:06 pm and is filed under General. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
