Toddler



Physical, emotional & behavioural milestones * Sleep, safety, play & learning * and more


Featured Toddler Content


Infectious
Diseases

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Is your little one seeing the world perfectly?

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Home safety checklist for infants & toddlers

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Latest Toddler Articles

Urine trouble

More Amid the many memories of my son’s first four years, the disasters related to his poop and pee (does 'excretion' really sound any better?) are especially vivid.There was the yellow sle...

The Bottom Line: When your child won't poop on the potty

More So you’ve finally had success with the first step of toilet training – your little onehappily goes pee in the potty, wipes, pulls her pants back on, and is back to the races.But ...

How to deal with pink eye

More “Lie down, Elmo,” my 20-month-old, Ari, instructs his ragged red doll. “Elmo need eye drops,” he tells me.“Good boy, Ari,” I say. “After Elmo itR...

Regular dental visits for children

More Although most children have all their baby teeth by age 21/2, the first dental visit should be planned within six months of the eruption of the first tooth or one year of age at the latest.F...

Flouride for children: yay or nay?

More Fluoride works in two ways. It can be incorporated into tooth enamel while the tooth is developing deep in the jaw bone, such as through fluoridated water, or by topical application to the e...

Brushing and flossing

More Oral cleansing may begin even before your baby's teeth start to erupt. Wipe the gums with a clean piece of gauze after each bottle or breast feeding. This not only cleans the mouth, but it a...

Tooth Decay in Children

More Almost all decay can be prevented, although some children are more susceptible than others. The surfaces of the teeth are sites for continual deposits of plaque. Plaque consists of a co...

Permanent Teeth

More The facts: The first permanent teeth to erupt are the first permanent molars, often called six-year molars, since this is the approximate age when they appear. They almost always erupt ...

Baby Teeth

More The facts: As a rule, teeth in the lower jaw arrive ahead of teeth in the upper jaw. Girls often get those first teeth - and also lose their baby teeth - earlier than boys.The first too...

Children's Eye Health

More The world is a wondrous place – a rainbow of colours and a myriad of shapes, with new faces and places at every turn. Most of us assume our kids are seeing the world perfectly. But how...

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Toddler (1-3 years)