CARING FOR YOUR BABY'S
UMBILICAL CORD STUMP
Introduction
The umbilical cord is a unique tissue, consisting
of two arteries and one vein covered by
a mucoid connective tissue called Wharton's
jelly and a thin mucous membrane. During
pregnancy, the placenta supplies all material
for foetal growth and removes waste products.
Blood flowing through the cord brings nutrients
and oxygen to the foetus and carries away
carbon dioxide and metabolic wastes. To
separate the newborn from the placenta,
the cord must be cut. After your baby is
delivered their umbilical cord will be clamped
with forceps and then cut with scissors,
a few centimetres away from the belly button.
There aren't any nerves in the cord so this
won't hurt your baby at all.
The few centimetres of cord that are still
attached to your baby make up the stump.
This will shrivel up and turn black within
a few days and then drop off completely
in about a week. Sometimes the cord falls
off in pieces rather than at once - if this
happens don't worry it's quite common. The
devitalised tissue of the cord stump can
be an excellent medium for bacterial growth,
especially if the stump is kept moist and
unclean substances are applied to it. Keeping
the stump clean and dry is therefore very
important in order to prevent infection.
How To Keep It clean
It's important to keep the stump clean so
that it doesn't get infected. Fold the baby's
diaper below the stump so that it is exposed
to air and not to urine. It's normal to
see a few spots of blood or even a small
discharge after the stump has fallen off.
If however, the area around the belly button
starts to look red and inflamed and the
skin feels hot, then you need to see the
doctor or mid wife.
While waiting for the cord to heal, avoid
tub baths for about 7 to 10 days after the
stump falls off. In warm weather, keep your
baby only in a diaper and T-shirt to let
air circulate and aid the drying process.
Avoid bodysuit-style undershirts until the
cord has fallen off.
How To Clean The Stump
There are a number of different ways to
clean the cord stump. We are going to explain
the most common.
What you will need
1. Sterilised bowl
2. Cooled boiled water
3. Cotton wool
4. Clean Towel
5. Changing mat
What to do
1. Make sure the room is warm enough so
that your baby doesn't get cold and upset
2. Lie your baby on the changing mat and
take off enough of his clothes to get to
the cord stump
3. Dip a cotton wool ball in the cooled
boiled water and gently wipe the whole area
around the stump. Use a new cotton wool
ball every time to keep it as clean as possible.
4. Don't rub or pull at the stump itself.
Any of the black stump residue which remains
should be left to fall off in it's own time.
5. Use more cotton wool or the clean towel
and thoroughly dry the whole area around
the belly button.
6. Leave the stump exposed to the air as
long as you can - it needs to be kept as
dry as possible so that it can heal and
fall off.
Some Facts
Over the years, mothers have been advised
not to immerse an infant in a tub for bathing
until the cord has separated because it
has been assumed that immersing the cord
in water would promote infection, prevent
drying and delay separation. Daily baths
in the form of sponge baths are, however,
common practice in many hospitals because
they are considered infection control measures.
A study comparing daily bathing with no
bathing has shown no difference in umbilical
cord colonization or infection between the
groups, and that immersing the newborn in
a tub is not harmful to the cord. However,
the main issue here is thermal protection
since bathing the newborn can induce hypothermia.
The newborn should not be bathed before
six hours after birth, or longer if possible,
and measures should be taken to ensure that
no heat loss occurs. Current recommendations
direct that newborns should not be bathed
routinely.