Paediatric Care for IVF & High-Risk Newborns in Warora
Shiv Clinic is part of the AANSH partner network of trusted healthcare providers in Vidarbha. Families who have welcomed a baby after IVF or a high-risk pregnancy can find experienced, attentive paediatric care right here in Warora — from the newborn period through early childhood.
IVF babies in Warora deserve the same standard of paediatric care as any child — with additional attention where needed for prematurity, low birth weight, or NICU recovery.
समय से पहले जन्मे बच्चे की देखभाल
आईवीएफ बेबी केयर · वरोरा
NICU फॉलो-अप पीडियाट्रिशियन
The Shiv Clinic & AANSH Clinical Handoff
AANSH IVF's primary clinical journey focuses on helping couples conceive through IVF treatment and supporting a healthy pregnancy with high-risk pregnancy care. The natural next chapter — a healthy, thriving baby — requires ongoing paediatric care from a trusted local doctor.
Shiv Clinic in Warora is part of the AANSH partner network. Families in Warora and Chandrapur district who have received fertility care at the AANSH IVF centre in Warora can continue their child's care here with Dr. Chanda Haryani. This handoff reflects a shared commitment to continuity of care for the whole family — not a commercial arrangement. Referrals between network partners are made in the best clinical interest of the patient.
Why the handoff matters for IVF families
- IVF pregnancies have a higher incidence of prematurity and low birth weight — both require closer paediatric monitoring in the first two years
- Families who have waited years for this child often have heightened anxiety about newborn health — a personally recommended, trusted paediatrician matters
- AANSH's clinical journey ends at delivery; a paediatrician is the next essential relationship
- Referral in either direction — fertility clinic to paediatrician, or paediatrician to fertility clinic — reflects normal clinical continuity of care
Shiv Clinic is located in Snehnagar, Warora — accessible from Chandrapur, Bhadrawati, Ballarpur, and the wider Chandrapur district. See Areas We Serve for travel guidance.
Fertility & pregnancy care at AANSH IVF
If you are planning a pregnancy or are under fertility care, these resources from our partner AANSH IVF may help:
- IVF treatment and IUI — how each is decided
- High-risk pregnancy care, prenatal care, and fetal monitoring
- Success stories from families across Chandrapur and Vidarbha
- Talk to a fertility specialist — free second opinion or contact the AANSH team
First Paediatric Visit After IVF or High-Risk Delivery
After delivery — whether at a hospital in Warora, Chandrapur, Nagpur, or elsewhere — the first paediatric check-up for a newborn is ideally within 24–48 hours of discharge. For IVF babies or babies from high-risk pregnancies, an early first visit is especially important.
What happens at the first visit
- Birth weight review: Newborns normally lose up to 7–10% of birth weight in the first week; regain by day 10–14
- Jaundice assessment: Jaundice (yellow skin/eyes) is common but needs monitoring — especially in preterm babies, who can develop more severe jaundice
- Feeding review: Breastfeeding support, latch assessment, formula guidance if needed
- Birth vaccination check: BCG, OPV-0, and Hepatitis B-1 should be recorded on the MCP card — bring it to the first visit
- Umbilical cord care: Check for signs of infection; review cord care instructions
- Prematurity assessment (if applicable): For babies born before 37 weeks, the doctor will discuss monitoring, feeding, and corrected age
Premature & Low-Birth-Weight Baby Care in Warora
A premature baby (born before 37 weeks of pregnancy) or a low-birth-weight baby (under 2.5 kg at birth) requires additional vigilance in the first months and years of life. समय से पहले जन्मे बच्चे की देखभाल — care for preterm babies — is an area of particular attention at Shiv Clinic.
Growth monitoring
Preterm and low-birth-weight babies may have slower initial weight gain. Growth is plotted on preterm-specific charts and assessed using corrected age. Regular weight checks in the first weeks and months are essential.
Feeding support
Premature babies may have weaker suck reflexes and smaller stomach capacity, requiring frequent, smaller feeds. The paediatrician can guide on feeding frequency, breast milk supplementation, and when to transition to a normal schedule.
Temperature regulation
Premature babies have less body fat and are less able to regulate their own temperature. In Warora's climate, both overheating in summer and cold exposure in winter are risks. Practical guidance on appropriate clothing and room temperature is provided at clinic visits.
Infection risk
Premature babies have immature immune systems and are more vulnerable to infections in the first months. Conservative, antibiotic-sparing care is paired with careful assessment to catch infections early when they do occur.
NICU-Graduate Follow-Up & Corrected-Age Developmental Monitoring
Babies who spend time in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) — whether for prematurity, respiratory support, jaundice treatment, or other conditions — require structured follow-up after discharge. This is sometimes called "NICU follow-up" or "high-risk infant follow-up."
Understanding corrected age
Corrected age is calculated from the original due date, not the birth date. A baby born 10 weeks early who is now 6 months old has a corrected age of approximately 3.5 months. Developmental milestones — sitting, babbling, first steps — are assessed using corrected age in preterm babies, typically until age 2. For detailed guidance on milestones, see our Child Development Milestones guide.
What NICU-graduate follow-up typically involves
- Weight, length, and head circumference plotted on appropriate growth charts (with corrected age)
- Developmental screening at corrected ages using validated tools
- Vision and hearing monitoring (ask the treating hospital what was done at NICU discharge)
- Feeding progress review — oral feeding skills, weight gain trajectory
- Vaccination schedule review — most vaccines follow chronological age; discuss with the paediatrician
- Parent education on red flags and when to seek urgent care
Twins & Multiples After IVF
Twin and multiple pregnancies are more common after IVF than after spontaneous conception — often following a frozen embryo transfer. Twins are more likely to be born preterm and at lower birth weight, which means they may both need the additional monitoring described above.
Importantly, each twin is an individual — they may have different growth trajectories, different developmental timelines, and different health needs. Each child receives their own assessment and care plan at Shiv Clinic.
- Each twin should have their own MCP (Mother and Child Protection) card and vaccination record
- Growth and milestones are tracked individually — comparison between twins can mask problems
- Feeding arrangements for twins can be complex; practical guidance is available at clinic visits
- Both twins should attend all routine check-up appointments — even if one seems "the healthy one"
Vaccination Timing for Premature Babies
According to IAP (Indian Academy of Pediatrics) guidelines, most routine childhood vaccines for preterm babies are administered based on chronological age (actual date of birth), not corrected age. This includes:
| Vaccine | Preterm timing note |
|---|---|
| BCG | Usually given at birth or when the baby reaches 2 kg — discuss with treating team |
| OPV-0 & Hepatitis B-1 | At birth (in hospital) regardless of gestational age if stable; confirm on MCP card |
| 6-week vaccines (Pentavalent, OPV-1, IPV, Rota, PCV) | At 6 weeks chronological age — even if preterm, unless clinically contraindicated |
| Subsequent doses | Follow chronological schedule; consult paediatrician for hospitalised NICU babies |
Source: IAP guidelines. Always confirm the specific schedule with the paediatrician for your baby's clinical situation. See full vaccination information →
Newborn Red Flags — When to Seek Help Immediately
All parents — and especially parents of IVF, premature, or NICU-graduate babies — should know the signs that require immediate medical attention. Do not wait for a scheduled appointment if any of the following appear:
🚨 Go to hospital immediately
- Breathing stops or baby turns blue around lips
- Seizure (jerking, stiffening, eyes rolling)
- Baby is limp and unresponsive
- Fever above 38°C (rectal) in a baby under 1 month
- Severe breathing difficulty — fast, noisy, or laboured breathing
⚠️ Call the clinic promptly
- Not feeding for more than 4–6 hours
- Jaundice spreading to chest or below
- Fewer than 4 wet nappies per day after day 5
- Persistent vomiting after every feed
- Redness, swelling, or discharge from umbilical stump
- Significant weight loss not recovering by day 14
Conservative, Antibiotic-Sparing Care — Reassurance for Anxious Parents
Parents of IVF babies often arrive at paediatric consultations with heightened anxiety — this is completely understandable after what may have been years of fertility treatment and a closely monitored pregnancy. Dr. Chanda Haryani's approach is to take every concern seriously while providing evidence-based reassurance when it is warranted.
Dr. Haryani follows a conservative, antibiotic-sparing approach where clinically appropriate. This means:
- Most common childhood illnesses — viral coughs, colds, and fevers — are managed with supportive care, not automatic antibiotics
- When a bacterial infection is clinically suspected or confirmed, antibiotics are prescribed appropriately
- Parents are given clear, honest guidance on what to watch for at home and when to return
- This approach aligns with IAP and WHO paediatric guidelines, with careful monitoring to catch any bacterial infection early when it does occur
Antibiotic-sparing care does not mean withholding necessary treatment — it means prescribing the right medicine for the right reason. For anxious parents of IVF babies, this approach means fewer unnecessary medicines while still catching the rare genuine infection early.
Illustrative summary (not a patient quote): Dr. Chanda Haryani follows a conservative, antibiotic-sparing clinical approach — giving supportive care for viral illnesses and prescribing antibiotics only when a bacterial infection is clinically indicated.
Frequently Asked Questions — IVF & Preterm Baby Care
- All newborns need regular paediatric check-ups. IVF pregnancies are more likely to involve prematurity or low birth weight, which may require closer monitoring of growth, development, and vaccinations. Discuss your baby's specific needs with the paediatrician at the first visit — ideally within 24–48 hours of hospital discharge.
- Corrected age (also called adjusted age) is calculated from the baby's original due date, not birth date. A baby born 8 weeks early at 6 months of age is developmentally closer to a 4-month-old. Developmental milestones and growth charts for preterm babies are assessed using corrected age until approximately 2 years. Consult the paediatrician for an individualised assessment plan.
- According to IAP guidelines, most routine childhood vaccines are given based on the baby's chronological age (actual birth date), not corrected age — including BCG, OPV, Hepatitis B, Pentavalent, and others. Hospitalised very preterm babies may have timing adjusted by the treating team. Always discuss the vaccination plan with the paediatrician before the first dose. This is educational only — individual plans depend on clinical status.
- Seek immediate medical attention if: the baby stops breathing or turns blue; feeding drops significantly; weight is not increasing as expected; the baby is unusually limp, difficult to wake, or inconsolable; skin or eyes turn yellow; or temperature is above 38°C (rectal). For NICU graduates, your paediatrician will give you a personalised list of red flags based on the baby's clinical history. This is educational — not a substitute for individual medical guidance.
- Yes — twin and multiple pregnancies are more common after IVF, and twins are more likely to be born preterm or at lower birth weight. Each twin should be assessed individually: they may have different growth trajectories and different corrected-age milestones. Both babies need their own paediatric care plan. Consult the paediatrician for a review tailored to each child.
- Shiv Clinic is part of the AANSH partner network of trusted healthcare providers in the Vidarbha region. Families who have received fertility care at AANSH IVF can continue their child's paediatric journey at Shiv Clinic. This is a clinical relationship reflecting Dr. Haryani's commitment to continuity of care — not a commercial arrangement.
Book Your Baby's First Paediatric Visit at Shiv Clinic
Ideally within 24–48 hours of hospital discharge. Bring the MCP card, discharge summary, and NICU notes if applicable.