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The
Health of your Child's Feet.
Only 20 years
ago it was believed that children needed support when learning to
walk, therefore many adults grew up wearing stiff high top leather
shoes. As it turns out babies do not need support, their ankles
are strong and stable from the beginning.
A research done
at Connecticut Children's Medical Center spent months studying the
way babies learn to walk. With the help of computer-assisted foot
pressure sensors and slow-motion video, researchers learned that,
from their first steps, babies walk with a rocking heel-toe motion,
just like adults.
The findings
toppled the long-held conventional wisdom that the first steps are
flat-footed stomps. With that assumption, the stiff, high -topped
baby shoe was born, designed by shoe companies to support flat-footed
steps and wobbly ankles. But babies' ankles, it turns out, are perfectly
stable from the beginning, making the traditional high topped shoe
unnecessary. The conclusion, said Sylvia Ounpuu, a movement specialist
at the children's medical center who directed the study, is that
bare feet is best for babies."
While bare feet
is the best for your baby, it may not always be the most comfortable
when the weather is ether too cold or the ground too hot. Therefore,
the second best it soft leather shoes made from formaldehyde free
leather, they allow your child's feet to flex naturally while they
learn to walk or crawl.
All our shoes
are carefully designed to ensure ease of fitting, comfort and safety.
We offer a wide range of colors and styles that are suitable for
newborn babies and toddlers up to 24 months. Our med/Lg size shoes
are great since they are overlapping size medium and large in those
important months where most babies, pull themselves up, start crawling
and walking. You can be sure to find a shoe size that will fit perfectly.

Canadian Paediatric Society (CPS)
Paediatrics & Child Health 1998; 3(5): 373
Reference No. CP98-02 (Formerly MS98-02)
Reaffirmed March 2004
Shoes are selected for protection, not correction. Myths often confuse parents who are buying shoes for their infants and children.
The Community Paediatrics Committee no longer accepts the old belief that a baby must wear shoes soon after birth. Keeping a baby out of shoes in warm, dry conditions is a good idea because walking barefoot develops good toe gripping and muscular strength. Indeed, there is increasing evidence to suggest that wearing shoes in early childhood may be detrimental to the development of a normal longitudinal arch.
Until toddlers have been walking for at least a few months, the only purpose of footwear is to protect the child's feet and to offer some grip on a smooth surface. For prewalkers, shoes are not necessary. Ankle boots do not necessarily give more support than low-cut shoes, but are useful because they are harder for children to remove. Shoes must fit the foot properly at the heel and allow enough room for the toes, leaving about 1.25 cm (½") between the longest toe and the tip of the shoe, measured standing up. This allows for sufficient movement of the toes and reasonable room for growth. Never buy shoes unless the child is present to try them on. Soft-sole footwear for protection and warmth is appropriate. For early walkers, shoes provide better fit, stability and safety than sneakers. Used shoes that have lost their shape should be avoided.
Corrective shoes are a misnomer and are rarely needed in physically normal children. The appearance of the foot changes with growth. Ninety-seven per cent of all children younger than 18 months of age present with flat feet, due mostly to a fat pad under the foot. At age 10 years, only 4% of children will still have flat feet. Children with mild or moderate flat feet need no specific treatment or corrective shoes. They should not be restricted from any physical activities. For severe flat feet, if accompanied by related pains in the legs or knees, longitudinal arch supports, scaphoid arches, Thomas heels and other orthotics may be tried.
Simple metatarsus adductus initially may be treated with passive stretching exercises. If the metatarsus adductus is not reducible, meaning that the forefoot does not return to a neutral position, splints and/or cast treatment in early infancy may be required. Intoeing with tibial torsion tends to improve with age. Patients with persistent intoeing with tibial torsion leading to functional impairment should be referred to a paediatric orthopedic surgeon.
Children's feet should be left alone as much as possible. Prescribing shoes to attempt to ‘correct' physiological flat feet, knock knees or bow legs is not useful for the child and expensive for the family. Doctors can avoid overtreatment of mild to moderate variations by explaining this to parents in a reassuring way.
References
- http://www.cps.ca/english/statements/CP/cp98-02.htm
Lisa C. Moore,
Doctor of Chiropractic from Auburn California wrote the following
The link between foot health and spinal health:
The benefits
of soft-soled baby shoes on developing feet:
During foot development, it is important for bones, muscles, blood
vessels and nerves to have room to grow without restriction. As
the beginning walker stands up and takes his first tentative steps,
the muscles of his feet grip the floor and the toes separate to
help the child have better balance and control. If her feet are
confined within a rigid shoe, the toes cannot operate in this way,
nor can the muscles of the foot and ankle develop the strength necessary
to hold her upright.
Throughout a
lifetime, foot health depends upon the flexibility of the structures
involved. This begins in infancy and continues as we grow. If we
wear rigid shoes, the bones cannot move freely, resulting eventually
in crippling arthritis. From a Chiropractic standpoint, spinal health
is connected to foot health. Inflexible feet affect all the joints
above, including the spinal column. Many times, pelvic imbalance
originates in foot distortion such as fallen arches or dropped metatarsal
bones. Every step a person takes translates into either stability
or instability for all the structures above. This process begins
with that first step.
Soft soled baby
shoes allow the beginning walker to grip the floor, developing strong
ankles and flexible foot bones. This creates a solid foundation
for bone and muscle formation in the rest of the body, especially
the spinal column. A level pelvis and straight spine depend upon
healthy feet through out our entire lives, beginning in infancy.
What
professionals are saying about our children's feet
"I am a
pediatric therapist and feel that your shoes are the best at promoting
natural development. They're the next best thing to bare feet."
K.M., Lake Harmony, PA
"Research
conducted at the University of Vermont concluded that toddlers stumble
and fall more often in thick, rubber soled sneakers than in soft,
flexible soled shoes. Children wearing soft, flexible soled shoes
fell less and walked more naturally. The study showed babies trip
five times more often in sneakers on carpeting and three times more
often on tiles when wearing sneakers. Moreover, soft, flexible soles
became more flexible with wear, thus ensuring a proper fit, while
rubber soles maintain their original stiffness." South Alexandria
Buyer's Guide, August 14, 1985
"A popular
footwear myth exists that babies need first shoes that are ankle
corseting and firm soled. The less a shoe does to an infant or growing
foot, the more it does for the foot. One should begin life on the
right foot." Footwear News Vol. 55, No. 32, 1999
Please visit
our web site and see for yourself how cute those soft leather shoes
really are http://www.PinkAndBlueBebe.com/shoes.htm
Sincerely,
Pink&BlueBebe
More Links to
information on childrens growing feet:
http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/ortho/ped02.html
http://www.childrens.com/health/shoes.htm
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