Understand what’s happening with your baby
Track feeding, sleep and changes in seconds — then ask what they mean. Answers that know your baby’s age and patterns.

Less guessing. Less searching. More confidence.
How it works
Track in one tap
Sleep, feeds, diapers — logged in seconds, one-handed, at 3 AM.

Ask what it means
Plain questions, calm answers — with sources you can check.

Answers that know your baby
Every answer fits your baby’s age and logs.

Ask about your baby, not “babies in general”
Tap a question — this is what answers look like.
She’s been fussy all evening — is this normal?
Evening fussiness is very common at 5 weeks — crying tends to peak around weeks 4–6, often in the evening. Her feeds and sleep from your log look typical for her age. Try skin-to-skin, gentle motion or a quieter room. If she’s inconsolable for hours, feels hot or refuses to feed, check in with your pediatrician.
Sources: MedlinePlus
this answer used: age 5 weeks · sleep last 24 h · evening feeds
Educational information, not medical advice.
Is an occasional green diaper okay?
Usually yes at this age — an occasional green stool often just reflects how fast milk is moving through. Frequent green stools with fussiness can point to a foremilk/hindmilk imbalance worth adjusting. Red streaks or white, clay-colored stools are different — those are worth a call to your pediatrician.
Sources: AAP guidance
this answer used: age 5 weeks · 4 diapers logged today
Educational information, not medical advice.
How long should she sleep at night now?
At 5 weeks most babies still sleep in 2–4 hour stretches — 14–17 hours per day in total, day and night. A first longer stretch of 4–6 hours often appears within the next few weeks. Her longest stretch this week was 4 h 10 m, which fits the typical range.
Sources: MedlinePlus
this answer used: age 5 weeks · sleep last 7 days
Educational information, not medical advice.
Reassuring when it should be — clear when it shouldn’t
Most of the time the honest answer is “this is normal” — and we say that plainly. When something genuinely needs a doctor, we say that just as plainly.
“She spits up after every feed — should I worry?”
Usually normalFrequent spit-up is usually normal — many babies do it daily and outgrow it. It’s likely fine if she’s gaining weight, feeding well, and content. Worth a same-day call if you see forceful vomiting, green or bloody spit-up, poor weight gain, or fewer wet diapers.
Reflects AAP guidance · not a diagnosis
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Answers draw on CDC, NIH, WHO and AAP-aligned sources — cited in every response.
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Guidance sources
CDC · NIH · WHO · AAP



