
Cribsheet
A Data-Driven Guide to Better, More Relaxed Parenting, from Birth to Preschool
Visão geral de Cribsheet
Economist Emily Oster's "Cribsheet" revolutionizes parenting with data, not guilt. Praised by The Economist and Washington Post, this myth-busting guide tackles breastfeeding, sleep training, and screen time debates. As Forbes contributor Adam Ozimek notes, she's "the all-knowing Aunt we have never met."
Temas principais em Cribsheet
- evidence-based parenting
- data-driven decision making
- infant health research
- parental mental health
- cost-benefit analysis
Citações de Cribsheet
Finally, someone who speaks the language of worried, educated parents everywhere: cold, hard data.
Your preferences matter too.
This framework liberates parents from the tyranny of "should".
If you have the option to send your baby to the nursery for a few hours of sleep, the evidence suggests you can do so without guilt.
The common "no sex until six weeks" rule has no scientific basis.
Personagens de Cribsheet
- Emily OsterAuthor and economist applying data to parenting
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Perguntas Frequentes Sobre Este Livro
Cribsheet is a data-driven guide to parenting decisions from birth to preschool, blending economics and evidence-based research. Emily Oster analyzes topics like breastfeeding, sleep training, and childcare, empowering parents to make informed choices by evaluating risks, benefits, and personal circumstances rather than relying on societal pressure or anecdotal advice.
New and expecting parents, data-oriented individuals, and those overwhelmed by conflicting parenting advice will benefit from Cribsheet. It’s ideal for readers seeking a structured, evidence-based approach to navigating early childhood decisions while reducing anxiety about “perfect” parenting.
Yes. The book distills complex research into actionable insights, helping parents cut through noise and make confident choices. Reviews praise its relatable tone, practical frameworks, and balanced analysis of controversial topics like breastfeeding and screen time.
Oster acknowledges breastfeeding’s short-term benefits (e.g., reduced gastrointestinal issues) but highlights inconclusive long-term evidence. She stresses that decisions should prioritize maternal well-being and logistics, sharing her own challenges to underscore the importance of personalized choices.
- Data over dogma: Use research to evaluate options, not fear or guilt.
- Individualized parenting: Solutions vary based on family needs.
- Critical thinking: Apply cost-benefit analysis to decisions like sleep training or vaccines.
The book reviews sleep-training studies, noting modest benefits and no long-term harm. Oster encourages parents to weigh sleep-deprivation costs against their comfort with methods like cry-it-out, emphasizing there’s no universally “correct” approach.
Oster tackles polarized issues like vaccine safety, daycare vs. nannies, and screen time. She critiques weak studies behind common warnings (e.g., “screen time causes ADHD”) and provides frameworks to assess risks based on family context.
- “Your choices can be right for you even if they wouldn’t be right for someone else.”
- “Anecdote is not data.”
These emphasize evidence-based, personalized decision-making over judgmental advice.
While Expecting Better focuses on pregnancy, Cribsheet extends Oster’s economics lens to postpartum decisions. Both books prioritize data literacy but differ in scope: newborn care vs. prenatal choices.
Some reviewers note limited guidance when evidence is inconclusive (e.g., discipline strategies) or oversimplified risk analyses. However, most praise its transparency about research limitations.
By demystifying studies and rejecting absolutist claims, the book reassures parents that many choices (e.g., breastfeeding duration) have marginal impacts compared to broader factors like stable caregiving.
Oster introduces decision matrices to quantify trade-offs (e.g., breastfeeding’s health benefits vs. maternal time costs). This tool helps parents align choices with their priorities and constraints.

















