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Child Health Guidelines

Family & Caregiving

Good preventive care is crucial to keeping your kids at their healthiest. Children grow and change fastest in their first months of life, so you will make the most frequent trips to the pediatrician for well-child visits at this time. If it is your first child, you may also want to pay a visit to your pediatrician before you give birth to discuss feeding, circumcision and any other concerns you may have leading up to your due date.

After your baby is born, the next visit to the pediatrician should take place two to three days after he or she comes home (for breastfed babies) or when the baby is between 2 and 4 days old (for babies discharged from the hospital before they were 2 days old). If it isn't your first child, your pediatrician may delay this initial office visit until your baby is between 1 and 2 weeks old.

From then on, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, well-child visits should take place:

  • By 1 month (experienced parents can wait until 2 months)
  • 2 months
  • 4 months
  • 6 months
  • 9 months
  • 1 year
  • 15 months
  • 18 months
  • 2 years
  • 3 years
  • 4 years
  • 5 years
  • 6 years
  • 8 years
  • 10 years
  • Each year after that until age 21

At each of these visits, your pediatrician will conduct a complete physical examination. This exam will include an assessment of your child's growth and development, including measurements of height, weight and head circumference. Your pediatrician will also test temperature, reflexes, hearing, vision, heart health and respiratory health and make other general health assessments. Many visits also include routine vaccinations, especially early on. During most well-child visits, your pediatrician will also go over nutrition and feeding, sleep patterns, infections currently circulating in the community and safety concerns. To get the most out of these appointments, write down any pressing questions ahead of time so you remember to present them to your doctor. Specific screening tests vary from state to state, so talk to your health care provider about what is best for your child with regard to health screenings.

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