NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital is an academic medical center located in New York City.

NYP provides care in every medical specialty and is ranked among the top ten hospitals in America by US News and World Report's annual "America's Best Hospitals" survey.

In addition to offering expert clinical care, our physicians conduct basic science and clinical trial research through our two affiliated, Ivy League medical colleges: Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and Weill Cornell Medical College.

These videos contain general information about health care topics.They do not provide medical advice and are not to be used or relied on for diagnosis or treatment. They do not take the place of instructions or advice from your doctor or other health care providers. Talk to your doctor or other health care provider before making a health care decision.

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  • @jonsie5229
    @jonsie52294 күн бұрын

    What about steep in their baby crib in the same room. so they can get used to sleeping in their bed.

  • @ashtrix
    @ashtrix11 күн бұрын

    And it’s just considered normal?? It ain’t normal! It’s like possession! My kid is 4 and still waking crying I’m so sick of it!

  • @RimpalPatel-wl1se
    @RimpalPatel-wl1seАй бұрын

    I just poop on my bed every day😂😂😂

  • @socal133
    @socal1332 ай бұрын

    I had this as a child. I developed an understanding of the dream i had every time i had a terror attack night. It was a dream of a fully dark space of nothingness. There was a large wooden box. I could lift it like it was nothing. No weight at all. It put me in a state of rage. As if i was burning on fire. Literally walked into my parents room screaming and sat on the bed acting and saying i was in fire. I was 3 years old when it started i figured the dream out at age 8. It stopped when i figured out the dream.

  • @ashtrix
    @ashtrix11 күн бұрын

    What was the meaning of?

  • @kogkanpur9283
    @kogkanpur92832 ай бұрын

    God bless you and use you mightly!

  • @thefinaldispatch
    @thefinaldispatch2 ай бұрын

    There’s no downside except your neglected husband who will leave your ass because you’re not taking care of him like before you had kids

  • @rosekennedy92
    @rosekennedy924 ай бұрын

    Some of my Asian family members let some of their kids co-sleep with them until they’re kids (the most recent co-sleeping kid being 8 years old), while most of my American family members with kids didn’t use much co-sleeping (if any), beyond a span of months after baby was born. What I’ve noticed is that the kids in my family that co-slept until they were kids ended up having a fear of sleeping alone or moving into their own bedroom by the time they were in 1st or 2nd grade. And of course, the kids in my family that were moved into their own room as babies never developed a fear of sleeping alone or in separate rooms, and naturally they never needed an adjustment period for something that was normalized to them since before they could recognize it. I did have a couple of American friends that started co-sleeping with their youngest child and only tried to transition their child to her own room at the age of 3 or 4, but by that time, she was too scared to sleep alone.

  • @Dim64920
    @Dim649204 ай бұрын

    Im 12 watching this im such a fucking loser

  • @graysonchow-vd8yc
    @graysonchow-vd8yc2 күн бұрын

    No you’re definitely not, I’m 13 and watching this at 1:00 a.m. like what the fuck is my problem….

  • @0920sandip
    @0920sandip4 ай бұрын

    Completely wrong and utter bullshit. Children are not independent in their bed until the age of 5. With the bed being wet with piss and diaper with poops. They don't get rest arrhythmia caused due to wet place to sleep. Kids need parents to help them out and calm during these times and others.

  • @ankharahallstrom1580
    @ankharahallstrom15806 ай бұрын

    I know kids usually don't recall night terrors, but there's an exception to every rule. I don't remember all of them, but I do remember some, a few I remember bits and pieces of, others I remember just a vague sense of pure fear, and there are some I remember in crystal-clear detail.

  • @Nirharsha12
    @Nirharsha126 ай бұрын

    I'm 18 and still sleeping with my parents...

  • @mynamemylastname7179
    @mynamemylastname71795 ай бұрын

    Loo-hoo-ze-her Get a job and move out

  • @d_marquis_ls
    @d_marquis_lsАй бұрын

    You gotta be kidding me

  • @Nirharsha12
    @Nirharsha12Ай бұрын

    @@d_marquis_ls why?

  • @NetworkNate
    @NetworkNate8 ай бұрын

    I am 10 years old, I slept in my parents room for about 8 and a half years. Until we moved into our new house, since we are in our new house, I had my own room, for 8 months or 1 year I slept in my room alone. And then, something traumatic happened, but I don't quite know what it was. I forgot how it happened, but I still remember the trauma. No matter how much my parents explained to me "Nothing bad is gonna happen , no one is gonna hurt you" but I just don't trust them. And last thing we have a big house so it feels like we're far from each other. Please help me.

  • @louisleary7116
    @louisleary7116 Жыл бұрын

    Me personal I think kids should transition as early as 2 or 3. Co sleeping can lead to other things like codependency or enmeshment if the parent is encouraging the behavior. Which can also lead to emotional incest.

  • @captain4595
    @captain45955 ай бұрын

    Bullshit.There is nothing like emotional incest.Parents kissing each other infront of kids is ok,but a child sleeping with his or her parents can cause incest?I agree that after sometime they should try to sleep alone,but even then,sometimes they can sleep

  • @0920sandip
    @0920sandip4 ай бұрын

    It don't, it didn't happen to me, my sister, to any of my cousins and to my Kid as well.

  • @captain4595
    @captain45954 ай бұрын

    @@0920sandip dude this people won't understand this.Kids in India sleep with their parents,yet never have this so called emotional incest

  • @nyphospital
    @nyphospital Жыл бұрын

    In a first-of-its-kind “domino” transplant in infants, cardiac surgeons at NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital performed a heart transplant in one baby, and then transplanted valves from her old heart into another infant - saving two lives and paving the way to save more. To read more click healthmatters.nyp.org/saving-two-babies-lives-with-one-pioneering-approach-to-heart-valve-transplantation/

  • @nyphospital
    @nyphospital Жыл бұрын

    Learn more at healthmatters.nyp.org/what-you-dont-know-about-your-liver-the-bodys-super-organ/

  • @nyphospital
    @nyphospital Жыл бұрын

    “Being a doula is part of my life’s work.” See Kerri on the job with three moms. healthmatters.nyp.org/a-day-in-the-life-of-a-doula/

  • @nyphospital
    @nyphospital Жыл бұрын

    “I’m here to help encourage you and help you have the birth experience that you desire,” Kerri says. “Being a doula is part of my life’s work.” See Kerri on the job with three moms. healthmatters.nyp.org/a-day-in-the-life-of-a-doula/

  • @naylahasan9083
    @naylahasan9083 Жыл бұрын

    tbh i think i was co-slept with but i hate sleeping with people in the same bed and only do it for reasons

  • @NylonStrings83
    @NylonStrings83 Жыл бұрын

    The western world is so obsessed with sex alcohol drugs and parties that they will even separate an innocent child who knows nothing about it a child needs human touch in his her infant and young age.

  • @NotSoGoodDark
    @NotSoGoodDark Жыл бұрын

    "Controversial subject in the world of sleep." Most Asians and people born in poor families: Really? Since when? Jokes aside, I will never understand why western parents decide that letting their *infant* sleep/stay in an empty room all by themselves is such a good idea. I assure you that if you present such a thing to most Indian or Pakistani woman that has kids or had kids they'll just stare at you like you're an idiot.

  • @Games33922
    @Games33922 Жыл бұрын

    I am 5 years old I have nightmares about alton brown mine happened at 4 years old

  • @lagatitacruz317
    @lagatitacruz317 Жыл бұрын

    Can a 5 year old have sleep paralysis?

  • @mthulisimotsa
    @mthulisimotsa Жыл бұрын

    You're talking about nightmares though.

  • @Callemos7
    @Callemos72 жыл бұрын

    My 4 year old son has night terrors every night for over a year.

  • @cooper6381
    @cooper63812 жыл бұрын

    I get these a lot when I’m sick… but I’ve almost always remembered vaguely what they were about, and the confrontation between me and my parents.

  • @toogle1234
    @toogle12342 жыл бұрын

    Wasn’t SIDS recently found to be genetic?

  • @CarnivalsofRoblox
    @CarnivalsofRoblox2 жыл бұрын

    I've only had a night terror whenI was 11-12 years old. At the time, I was still sleeping with my mom because I didn't like my older bed as it felt too uncomfortable to sleep on. One day my mom claimed that she was having trouble sleeping and then out of the blue, I started to scream loudly. When she asked what was wrong, I started crying while saying "Nightmares" and she soothed me until I 'Fell back asleep'. Now, here is thing thing; I have been experiencing Nightmares since 2008-09 and it occurs so much I am just used to it, not even the worst nightmare can get me screaming. This was in 2018 and I haven't experienced one since as of May 2022

  • @pat.tt.ttt_
    @pat.tt.ttt_ Жыл бұрын

    same here. I remember when I was so young (4 years old) I would start screaming and then I would wake up on my mothers arms screaming and crying and in such great fear it was so terrifying. I’ve been searching for what that condition was and I finally found my answers.

  • @angelwing126
    @angelwing1262 жыл бұрын

    I am 40. Mine began at 11. Their were triggers in my waking hours that, as an adult, I learned and now avoid. But, this still happens about 4-6 times a year. As a child, they were frequently happening 15-20 times a month. Horrible. Wouldn't wish this on anyone. I also am a somnambulist so, I wander around the house when they happen. Scared the $... out of my husband the first few years. Poor man lost so much sleep worried I'd walk out the house or hurt myself.

  • @kiryuuwz4129
    @kiryuuwz41292 жыл бұрын

    My parents told me this is happening to me at night

  • @LUKE390425
    @LUKE3904252 жыл бұрын

    When I was a kid, I saw an anvil that was falling from the sky and going to kill me. That same dreamed happened a couple times. Then just recently as an adult, I felt trapped under my car, like I was changing my oil and the car was going to crush me if I didn’t move.

  • @amours_jo-zee2803
    @amours_jo-zee28032 жыл бұрын

    It’s so hard 😩 i want to co sleep with my baby because I’m just so obsessed with him and i enjoy how peaceful he sleeps under me but i know it’s not what’s best for him so it’s so hard making that sacrifice and putting him in his crib. 😩🤣

  • @micka6288
    @micka62882 жыл бұрын

    It's not bad really, as long as you make sure he is aware as early as possible that at a later age he will be sleeping on the bed in his room

  • @truthonwheels8652
    @truthonwheels8652 Жыл бұрын

    Co sleeping is best for baby. It’s natural for mother and baby to be close and provide comfort.

  • @haqi9fly
    @haqi9fly Жыл бұрын

    your son will be tough and independent. I remember living with my grandmother because my mother pass when I was 6 and I use to have to sleep in the room by myself in the dark even after coming back from the drive ins watching a Freddy movie while my uncle who was only like 2 years older than me slept in the bed with his mammy until like 12. he turn out to be a co-dependent and as an adult he couldn't survive in rough environments bad (neighborhood). I'm a loving person but a tough man who lacks fear when it comes to being independent and standing toe to toe with another man who's the same. may my uncle rest in pease. You're doing your son a favor. He'll thank you when he becomes a man.

  • @enchantechan
    @enchantechan Жыл бұрын

    These comments got me never wanting to cosleep.. kids cosleeping for 8..11..12 years is not okay.

  • @kristenadorno
    @kristenadorno2 жыл бұрын

    My 3.5 year old daughter just had one, I think.. it was so scary that I started crying after she fell back to sleep. She woke up screaming and crying and she was hot, sweating, and her heart was pounding super fast. I tried to hold her and I said "it's OK mommy's here" and she looked at me with this eery, blank stare and then started screaming that she wants her mommy again as if she didn't recognize me! Then she'd stop and stare at the wall and still had this eery look in her eyes, something I've never seen before.. I didn't know what to do! I was scared myself.

  • @nataliaxo8053
    @nataliaxo80532 жыл бұрын

    You need Jesus! The power of Jesus as your daughter is fighting in the spirit

  • @SayLitLeo
    @SayLitLeo2 ай бұрын

    Man imma grown man and no lie this almost had me in tears I was scared as hell

  • @kierascrafts
    @kierascrafts2 жыл бұрын

    I heard this woman talking on the radio last week and she was talking about co sleeping with her son. She tried moving him into his own room when he was a toddler and he kept moving into her room. He’s 14 now and it’s more than just sleeping in a different room. The woman on the radio said she can’t even get enough time to take a shower because he son won’t stay in another room without her for that long. She thinks he has something like separation anxiety

  • @mynamemylastname7179
    @mynamemylastname71795 ай бұрын

    14 and does that🤔he should be introduced to something called the BELT😂

  • @March808
    @March8082 жыл бұрын

    Wake them up please I’m 38 now and no one ever woke me up to my all to me I still struggle now

  • @djok5194
    @djok51942 жыл бұрын

    No eggs of cheese in the evening is my fix... believe it or not!! 🙂

  • @duss2847
    @duss28472 жыл бұрын

    My 2 year old daughter sometimes wakes up screaming and crying, she doesn't let me or mom get close and gets mad if we try to hold or touch her at all. I've heard saying their name can make it worse so I try to be as quiet as possible while giving her space to calm down. She's a daddy's girl so usually I can make it better and it hurts when I'm not able to do anything for her. Just trying to find info or ways I can help her.

  • @C1GMA
    @C1GMA2 жыл бұрын

    Bruh I just had a nightmare my mom shot Herslef in the head and I was just crying for the last 10 minutes like what the actual fuck is going on in my brain Jesus Christ

  • @boiifyoudont1155
    @boiifyoudont11552 жыл бұрын

    For me what happens is if I lay on my back and stare down my hallway time seems like it speeds up, everything gets louder and my room gets smaller. I can’t explain it to my mum and it’s really annoying me when I talk to her I suddenly can’t remember what happens it definetly helps being able to come on here and share what happens to me since I know there is probably millions more people who experience the same thing. Edit: I swear to god my hallway is infested with all spirits possible lol

  • @angelwing126
    @angelwing1262 жыл бұрын

    The increased sound is deafening. That happens to me too. I remember mine for a few minutes when I wake then they wash away. Wrote notes so I know for later reference. You are not alone. My mom didn't get it either, thought I was schizo, had me tested... Not me mom!

  • @joshuaturner126
    @joshuaturner1269 ай бұрын

    Wow my 6 year old tells me the same thing.. she wakes up crying eye wide not blinking saying everything is moving fast in the pictures in her head

  • @misskochen
    @misskochen2 жыл бұрын

    I used to have it when I was 12 only when I had fever but after 4 years it happened again

  • @smokedbyf249
    @smokedbyf2492 жыл бұрын

    I use to have night terrors and I wish my parents recorded them I don’t remember them barely at all very vivid but I was up for a while and I don’t remember what it was about but my parents say that I was always screaming “watch out behind you” and “he’s coming” and I always had my eye super wide and always screaming and sweating and crying until eventually I would wake up in my moms arms and feel soo over heated and crying and so scared

  • @miriamdavis2988
    @miriamdavis29882 жыл бұрын

    As a baby, my kid slept in her crib sometimes with me. As a toddler, out of necessity, she would sleep with me because we only had on bed, in a small studio apartment. Now, she is 6 and still likes to sleep with me but I explain to her she has to sleep in her own bed. She does get scared but adjusts well.

  • @kingarasan2004
    @kingarasan20042 жыл бұрын

    Almost for the past twenty days, my kid wokes up around 3 am and starts screaming badly, crying angrily and asks us to take out for play or else someother requests. Everyday going to bed has become terrific for us. Dunno how to solve this? Appreciated if u advice us

  • @violetgibson9
    @violetgibson92 жыл бұрын

    Lots of people here don’t understand that night terrors are not the same thing as nightmares. It is a completely different thing. If you think bad dreams is somehow unique, you are wrong. Everybody gets those.

  • @kimberleeturner8475
    @kimberleeturner84752 жыл бұрын

    I use to be able to wake myself up from a bad dream when I was kid. I would blow as if I was blowing a balloon up. I don't understand why you wouldn't wake them up because the dreams are so scary and your in the middle of it wanting it to stop- go away. You want to wake up because you know while it's happening it's a dream but unable to stop it. I guess that's why I learned how to control it. It's been a long time and I don't have them anymore. Funny how we can remember something from that long ago

  • @violetgibson9
    @violetgibson92 жыл бұрын

    Night terrors is not having bad dreams. It is a condition only some people experience. Everyone has bad dreams sometimes.

  • @ok_null
    @ok_null2 жыл бұрын

    Im 30 and I still have night terrors and im fully lucid while inside of them, they are absolutely terrible.

  • @ImmortalIdeas
    @ImmortalIdeas2 жыл бұрын

    Ok.. We have solved this problem. And it works great! Heres what to do.. First. Think of what the child likes. Cookies, cake, any sweets really Second... Walk into their room and say this!!! Hey I brought you some cup cakes and cookies. They will instantly stop the terror and start looking for the cup cake. I'll say mmm don't these cookies look good. And the child will pause. Look at you and say yeah I'd like some Then everytime you do this the child will wake up nicely from the terror.. This helps immensely!!!!! Now when our child starts to have one. I walk in and say. Cup cakes and cookies. The child then automatically remembers the key words.and says oh my gosh I was dreaming.... This has helped 100% Now if the child starts to have one, the thought of cup cakes and cookies will pop in their head and they auto correct.. no joke... This episode here was terrible... Dont let it control your child..... Be there for them and help. Dont just allow it.... Say here are some cup cakes and cookies. They will look over at you holding an imaginary plate of cookies and actually stop the terror instantly!!!

  • @violetgibson9
    @violetgibson92 жыл бұрын

    Night terrors are not dreams. And cookies and cake to make them sleep? That is nuts.

  • @ImmortalIdeas
    @ImmortalIdeas2 жыл бұрын

    @@violetgibson9 lol! Nice reading. It says to say it not to give it.... Wth? Lmao yeah heres some food while you sleep lmao!!!!

  • @raccoon4058
    @raccoon40582 жыл бұрын

    Not sure if this is what a night terror is but I would wake up in middle of it and see my mom and siblings telling me to wake up, it sounded like they were screaming at me and I remember screaming and crying desperately trying to get away from them because in my dream (I had this dream everytime this happened) they were forcing me into a big machine where I'd get swished between two HUGE concrete cylinders that were rotating really slowly, and I'd hear my own bones cracking, I remember everytime I'd wake up for a split second and catch glimpses of my mom trying to comfort me and it was terrifying.

  • @muddybasilisk7526
    @muddybasilisk75262 жыл бұрын

    That’s freaking terrifying. I remember when I was a wee lad, prolly around 3 or 4, I had this recurring dream / hallucination of a thing that I called the big bad machine. I mostly don’t remember the details, but I do remember I was facing so I could see my entire room, and this weird, modern, white and black sort of plasticy machine with arms would float above me and try to steal a gemstone out of my bellybutton. Jesus tapdancing Christ I was a weird child. Frankly, that shite was terrifying

  • @raccoon4058
    @raccoon40582 жыл бұрын

    @@muddybasilisk7526 oh God that sounds horrifying

  • @Cstam913
    @Cstam9132 жыл бұрын

    One time I did it on a cruise ship once and it was bad

  • @ScubaSteve-ch3oj
    @ScubaSteve-ch3oj2 жыл бұрын

    My question is: Does this Dr. have children?

  • @mynamemylastname7179
    @mynamemylastname71795 ай бұрын

    Nope; probably cats😂

  • @jennajuice743
    @jennajuice7432 жыл бұрын

    My daughter has had these since about 1 years old. Pediatricians didn’t believe me but she’s almost 3 and they haven’t gone away. It’s been about twice a month for a while and it always breaks my heart

  • @violetgibson9
    @violetgibson92 жыл бұрын

    I had the very same situation. Her pediatrician didn’t even know the difference between night terrors, and nightmares. We lived in an apartment, so luckily there were no stairs. Whenever I tried to calm her I would get hit, kicked, pinched. She never remembered anything when she woke up. I started a new approach. I would stay in the living room and call her to me. She would walk down the hall, eyes open. I would tell her to sit in her chair, and she would. I would start a conversation. It would be something real, and completely apart from the moment, such as, would you like to plant a tree? She would answer something equally detached, like, dogs would like it but it will fall down. We would continue a few minutes until she would wake up. It was nothing remarkable. She would simply start talking sense. I would ask her for a hug, and send her back to bed. After a few times, at the point when she would wake up, she would ask, did I do it again? It eventually occurred less often, but didn’t stop until her mid teens.