Sibling Rivalry Toward a Newborn
What is sibling rivalry?
Sibling rivalry refers here to the natural jealousy of
children toward a new brother or sister. Older siblings can
feel jealous when the baby arrives until they are 4 or
5 years old. Not surprisingly, most children prefer to be
the only child at this age. Basically, they don't want to
share your time and affection. The arrival of a new baby is
especially stressful for the firstborn and for siblings less
than 3 years old. The jealousy arises because the older
sibling sees the newcomer receiving all the attention,
visitors, gifts, and special handling.
The most common symptom of sibling rivalry is lots of
demands for attention: the older child wants to be held and
carried about, especially when mother is busy with the
newborn. Other symptoms include acting like a baby again
(regressive behavior), such as thumbsucking, wetting, or
soiling. Aggressive behavior--for example, handling the
baby roughly--can also occur. All of these symptoms are
normal. While some can be prevented, the remainder can be
improved within a few months.
How can I help prevent sibling rivalry?
During pregnancy
- Prepare the sibling for the newcomer. Talk about the
pregnancy. Let your child feel your baby's movements.
- Try to find a hospital that provides sibling classes
where children can learn about babies and about sharing
their parents with a new brother or sister.
- Try to give your child a chance to be around a new baby
so that he has a better idea of what to expect.
- Encourage your child to help you prepare the baby's room.
- Move your child to a different room or new bed several
months before the baby's birth. If she will be enrolling
in a play group or nursery school, start it well in
advance of the birth.
- Praise your child for mature behavior, such as talking,
using the toilet, feeding or dressing herself, and
playing games.
- Don't make any demands for new skills (such as toilet
training) during the months just preceding the delivery.
Even if your child appears ready, postpone these changes
until your child has made a good adjustment to the new
baby.
- Tell your child where she'll go and who will care for her
when you go to the hospital if she won't be home with her
father.
- Read books together about what happens during pregnancy
and after the baby is born.
- Look through family photographs and talk about your
child's first year of life.
In the hospital
- Call your older child daily from the hospital.
- Try to have your older child visit you and the baby in
the hospital. Many hospitals will allow this.
- If your older child can't visit you, send her a picture
of the new baby.
- Encourage Dad to take your youngster on some special
outings at this time (for example, to the park, zoo,
museum, or fire station).
Coming home
- When you enter your home, spend your first moments with
the older sibling. Have someone else carry the new baby
into the house.
- Give the sibling a gift "from the new baby."
- Ask visitors to give extra notice to the older child.
Have your older child unwrap the baby's gifts.
- From the beginning, refer to your newborn as "our baby."
The first months at home
- Give your older child the extra attention he needs. Help
him feel more important. Try to give him at least
30 minutes a day of exclusive, uninterrupted time. Hire
a baby sitter to care for the baby and take your older
child outside or look through his baby album with him.
Make sure that the father and relatives spend extra time
with him during the first month. Give him lots of
physical affection throughout the day.
- When you are busy attending to the baby, try to include
your older child by talking with him. When you are
nursing or bottle-feeding the baby, read a story, play a
game, or do a puzzle with your older child.
- Encourage your older child to touch and play with the new
baby in your presence. Allow him to hold the baby while
sitting in a chair with sidearms. Avoid such warnings as
"Don't touch the baby." Newborns are not fragile and it
is important to show your trust. However, you can't
allow the sibling to carry the baby until he reaches
school age.
- Enlist your older child as a helper. Encourage him to
help with baths, dry the baby, get a clean diaper, or
find toys or a pacifier. At other times encourage him to
feed or bathe a doll when you are feeding or bathing the
baby. Emphasize how much the baby likes the older
sibling. Make comments such as "Look how happy she gets
when you play with her," or "You can always make her
laugh."
- Don't ask the older siblings to be quiet for the baby.
Newborns can sleep fine without the house being perfectly
quiet. This request can lead to unnecessary resentment.
- Accept regressive behavior, such as thumbsucking or
clinging, as something your child needs to do
temporarily. Do not criticize him.
- When your child behaves aggressively, intervene promptly.
Tell him, "We never hurt babies." Send your child to
"time-out" for a few minutes. Don't spank your child or
slap his hand at these times. If you hit him, he will
eventually try to do the same to the baby as revenge.
For the next few weeks don't leave the two of them alone.
- If your child is old enough, encourage him to talk about
his mixed feelings about the new arrival. Suggest an
alternative behavior: "When you're upset with the baby,
come to me for a big hug."
When should I call my health care provider?
Call during office hours if:
- Your older child tries to hurt the baby.
- Regressive behavior doesn't improve by 1 month.
- You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2003 McKesson Health Solutions LLC. All rights reserved.