My son Théo was born six weeks ago. He is, by any objective measure, a beautiful baby. He is also a baby with reflux, which means that for the first three weeks of his life, neither of us slept properly. He couldn't lie flat without the stomach acid rising and waking him in discomfort. I couldn't sleep because he couldn't sleep. My husband Julien took the night shifts when he could, but Théo's distress was the kind that required feeding and positioning and patience, and there was a limit to how much any of us could do.
Our midwife mentioned reflux at the two-week check. Our GP confirmed it at three weeks. Both suggested keeping Théo slightly elevated during sleep. Neither of them told me how to actually achieve that safely with a newborn who needed to be on a firm, flat surface. I went home and started researching at midnight, which is when most of my research happens now.
The Problem With Improvised Solutions
I'm a 32-year-old translator based in Lyon, currently on maternity leave. My instinct with most problems is to find a systematic solution rather than improvise, which is why the various suggestions I'd read online — propping one end of the Moses basket with a book, rolling a towel under the mattress — made me uncomfortable. These felt like workarounds that introduced new risks rather than addressing the underlying need. I wanted something designed for this specific purpose, by people who had thought carefully about infant safety.
I needed a sleep surface that was inclined at the right angle, supported Théo's position without him being able to slide, and was made from materials I could trust against a newborn's skin.
Why the baby plus Reflux Bed
The baby plus Mother Side Baby Reflux Bed in Dandelion was designed specifically for newborns with reflux, which immediately distinguished it from the generic baby nests I'd been looking at. The inclined surface sits at approximately 30 degrees — the angle recommended for reducing reflux symptoms — supported by polyurethane foam that holds the position without compressing. The raised sides prevent Théo from rolling or slipping. The head-shaping pillow supports healthy head development while keeping his airway clear. And the safety belt — the detail that made me feel most confident — keeps him secure on the inclined surface without restricting him.
The materials were the other factor. The inner filling is breathable silicone bead fibre, which regulates temperature better than standard foam. The outer cover is 100% cotton, removable for washing — which, with a reflux baby, is not a minor consideration. The carry handle meant I could move it between rooms without disturbing Théo, which matters when you're trying to keep a sleeping baby asleep.
The First Night
It arrived on a Wednesday afternoon. I set it up immediately, following the instructions carefully: inclined surface positioned correctly, Théo placed with his head elevated, safety belt secured. He settled into it without protest, which was already unusual — Théo had been protesting most things for three weeks.
He slept for three hours. Uninterrupted. I sat next to him for the first hour because I didn't trust it, then went to lie down for the second hour, then woke up to find him still sleeping peacefully into the third. I lay in bed and cried quietly, which is the kind of thing that happens when you've been running on two-hour sleep fragments for three weeks and something finally works.
Six Weeks On
Théo sleeps in the reflux bed for every nap and every night sleep. His reflux hasn't resolved — that takes time and sometimes medication — but the inclined position means it no longer wakes him consistently. We're getting four to five hour stretches now, which after the first three weeks feels like an extraordinary luxury.
The removable cover has been washed more times than I can count. It comes off easily, washes well, and goes back on without difficulty. The carry handle has been used daily — the bed travels between the bedroom at night and the living room during the day without waking Théo. The safety belt has held its position through six weeks of use without any sign of wear.
I've recommended this to two friends who are expecting and one who has a newborn with similar symptoms. I don't recommend things lightly, particularly when it comes to infant sleep. This one I recommend without hesitation.
You'll find it in the Bassinets & Cradles, Baby & Toddler Furniture, and Furniture collections. If your baby has reflux and you're trying to find a safe way to keep them elevated during sleep, this is where I'd start.
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