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  2. Plastic pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastic_pants

    Plastic pants. Plastic pants (also known as waterproof pants, plastic panties, diaper covers, nappy covers, dry joggers, nappy wraps, wraps, or pilchers) are garments worn over a diaper to prevent liquid or solid waste from leaking through the fabric.

  3. Rubber pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_pants

    They have now been almost entirely replaced by plastic or waterproof textile panties as an infants' garment, when such is used over a diaper at all. Today they exist mainly in the adult incontinence market. Modern Rubber Pants. Parents opting to cloth diaper their children now have several options in a diaper cover.

  4. Cloth diaper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloth_diaper

    A cloth diaper (American English) or a cloth nappy (Australian English and British English), also known as reusable diaper or reusable nappy, is a diaper made from textiles such as natural fibers, human-made materials, or a combination of both. Cloth diapers are in contrast to disposable diapers, made from synthetic fibers and plastics.

  5. New Mom Speaks Out After Video of Her Finding 17 Dirty ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/mom-speaks-video-her-finding...

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  6. A mom of two made a TikTok of her search for dirty diapers lying around her house. She found 17. This admission has opened a conversation on postpartum overwhelm.

  7. New mother speaks out after being shamed for having 17 dirty ...

    www.aol.com/news/mother-speaks-being-shamed...

    Hannah, a mother of two, went viral on TikTok after sharing footage of herself collecting over a dozen dirty diapers scattered throughout her house

  8. Procter & Gamble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procter_&_Gamble

    One of the most revolutionary products to come out on the market was the company's disposable Pampers diaper, first test-marketed in 1961, the same year Procter & Gamble came out with Head & Shoulders. [20] Prior to this point, disposable diapers were not popular, although Johnson & Johnson had developed a product called Chux. Babies always ...

  9. The Secret Baby Catchers of Alabama - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/alabama...

    During Jim Crow, black families could not access white hospitals and white doctors often refused to treat them, so it fell to black “granny midwives” to deliver children. In Alabama, Margaret Charles Smith caught her first baby at the age of 5 and, in her own telling, went on to deliver 3,500 children without losing a single mother.