Parenting

Sunday, December 6, 2009

11 Ways to Raise a Healthy Child

 11 Ways to Raise a Healthy Child

As a parent, you are an important teacher of health care and health information for your child. Here are 11 recommendations to help you succeed at this important job.

1. Choose breast over bottle.

Breast-feed and you will give your baby a health advantage from day one. Breast milk provides all the nutrients a newborn needs. It also has important antibodies that help babies fight infections. Research shows that breast-fed babies have fewer ear infections and allergies and less diarrhea.

2. Be wise: Immunize.

Immunizations protect your child from serious diseases, such as measles, whooping cough, and hepatitis. Children should receive most of their shots before age 2. But older children and teenagers also need certain shots. Talk with your child's doctor to find out which immunizations your child needs and when.

You may worry that your child will have a reaction to an immunization. But when reactions do occur, they are usually mild. The benefits of immunizing your child far outweigh any potential risks.

3. Take children to checkups.

Your baby needs regular checkups before age 2. After 2, your child's doctor will recommend a checkup schedule that is appropriate for your child. At these checkups, the doctor tracks your child's growth and development. Checkups allow doctors to spot potential problems early, when they are easiest to treat. Checkups are also a good time to ask questions about how to keep your child healthy.

4. Buckle 'em up.

Beginning with your child's first ride home from the hospital, always use a car seat. Car accidents kill and injure more children in the United States than any other type of injury. Protect your children by placing them in a car seat that is appropriate for their weight and height. Be sure to read the directions so that you understand how to properly use the car seat. Most crashes are head-on, so always put kids in the backseat.

Children should use a car seat for as long as possible. Once they have outgrown car seats, they should sit in a booster seat until they are big enough to use a seat belt. For proper fit, the shoulder belt should fit across your child's shoulders, and the lap belt should lie flat and low across the hips.

5. Start dental care early.

Healthy teeth can last a lifetime. So teach kids good dental care at an early age. Even before the first tooth appears, wipe baby's gums with a clean, damp cloth after feeding.

Once the first tooth appears, begin brushing. Start flossing your child's teeth as soon as any two teeth touch. Once children begin brushing their own teeth, supervise them to make sure they are doing a good job.

Because letting food sit on the teeth promotes tooth decay, teach children to brush after meals. Bottles filled with milk or juice can also cause decay. So don't put children to bed with a bottle or let them walk around unattended with a bottle. If possible, wean kids from the bottle by age 1.

The American Dental Association recommends that you take your child to a dentist within six months of getting the first tooth and no later than 1 year old. Your child's dentist can tell you how often your child should get regular checkups thereafter.

6. Put safety first.

It only takes a second for an accident to happen. Here are a few basic safety rules:

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      Keep medicines and household chemical products where children cannot get to them.
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      Don't leave kids unsupervised, especially when they are outside, near the street, or near or in water.
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      Make sure your children wear helmets when bicycling.
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      If you have guns in the house, make sure that they are kept unloaded and locked up, and that the ammunition is kept in a separate place and locked up, as well.

7. Let kids live smoke-free.

If you smoke, quitting smoking is one of the greatest gifts you can give your children (and yourself). Kids who live with a smoker cough and wheeze more and recover more slowly from colds. Secondhand smoke increases a child's risk for ear infections, bronchitis, pneumonia, upper respiratory infections, and asthma. In addition, infants regularly exposed to smoke are at higher risk for sudden infant death syndrome. For your child's health, and your own, kick the smoking habit.

8. Offer healthy food.

Good nutrition is especially important for growing bodies. Children under 2 have special nutrition needs, and for them low-fat eating is not healthy. By age 5, however, a child's diet should be similar to a healthy adult's, with lots of fruits, vegetables, and grains, and low in fat, sugar and meat.

Make it easy for your children to eat healthfully by offering a wide variety of nutritious food choices. Also, let them help choose what foods to buy.

To promote healthy eating habits, it's important not to force a child to eat or make certain foods off-limits. Doing so may lead to poor eating patterns. A healthy diet can include any food in moderation.

9. Court a love of exercise.

Active kids are healthy kids. Children should be physically active every day. In fact, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which includes recommendations for exercise as well as for nutrition, says that children should get 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise daily. Regular exercise boosts cardiovascular fitness and overall health. Help your kids be their healthiest by joining them in physical play. Tag, swimming, bicycling, and walking can all be enjoyed as a family.

10. Keep children's skin youthful.

As great as outside play is for kids, there is a downside—sun exposure. Skin cancer later in life is directly related to sun exposure in childhood and adolescence and cumulative sun exposure over a lifetime. When sun exposure has the potential to cause sunburn, kids over 6 months should wear sunscreen, even in the water. Sunscreen should have a minimum SPF of 15. For sensitive areas, such as the nose and ears, use zinc oxide. It is a total block.

Have kids wear clothing made of tightly woven fabrics and hats that shade their face, neck, and ears. To avoid the most intense sun exposure, schedule outdoor playtime before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. whenever possible. Also, have kids play in the shade, where the sun is not as strong.

11. Be a role model.

Children learn many of their most valuable lessons from you. In other words, choose a healthy, active lifestyle for yourself—and include your children in it. Teaching by example makes a lasting impression on your children, and creates healthy family traditions in the process.
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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 13
  • gladness's Avatar
    Posted by gladness Tue Oct 14, 2008 9:15am PDT

    i would like to know how can i help mygirl who is two years old, and she frequently get flue and colds.

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  • Brittney's Avatar
    Posted by Brittney Sun Aug 2, 2009 10:59am PDT

    12.Love Them.

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  • Mike's Avatar
    Posted by Mike Tue Aug 4, 2009 8:04pm PDT

    I apologize for being snotty but, really, you did not have to make the very first one "choose breast over bottle". I was unable to breast feed my now 14-month old daughter (who, by the way, is healthy, smart, and at a perfect weight for her height ...) and felt like suuuuuch a failure as a mother because I couldn't do this. I understand that certain studies have found benefits with this, but the newest research questions if the benefits are from the breast milk itself or the bonding that occurs. I bonded great with my daughter from day 1, and I feel that THIS over anything has helped her to suceed. Please do not make this the best way to raise a healthy child, making mothers who can't or won't feel like failures before they've even begun. PS: I'm not Michael, I'm his wife Alexis ... just signed in as him on yahoo!!!

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  • LindsE's Avatar
    Posted by LindsE Tue Aug 4, 2009 8:10pm PDT

    Probiotics! For all children, but especially for children who get sick frequently, please look into probiotics. 80% of the immune system is in the gut! Probiotics help to be sure that there is healthy flora. They provide healthy bacteria to line the intestines so that bad bacteria and yeast don't have as much room there.

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  • Ariel's Avatar
    Posted by Ariel Tue Aug 4, 2009 8:46pm PDT

    I agree completely with Michael/Alexis. The whole breastmilk argument is vastly exaggerated. The research is not definitive, and I know plenty of parents with children who were breastfed and still developed severe allergies. It's a bunch of b.s. if you ask me.

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  • God Bless America's Avatar
    Posted by God Bless America Tue Aug 4, 2009 10:06pm PDT

    these are all good advices except that you forgot to mention on your basic safety rules is not to leave children unsupervised while watching tv. yes tv, if you are too busy cleaning or whatever that you have your tv as your nanny for the time being and God forbids your children start playing with the remote controls and cable wires. i know remote controls are harmless compared to cable wire which they can get zapped but remote controls are powered by batteries and batteries may leak hazardous chemicals if remote controls are not handled properly. also a very important chemical to avoid to have healthy kids is Bisphenol-A (BPA)... remember the name cause it is a chemical to produce polycarbonate plastic and it can be found on baby bottles as well as baby food in a container. people should do more research about this chemical and do something about it like voice out your opinion that way the government will do something about it.

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  • Donna's Avatar
    Posted by Donna Tue Aug 4, 2009 11:16pm PDT

    Not every child can tolerate "all" of the "recommended" immunizations before the age of 2. Babies who have a family history of autoimmune illness, for example, should not get more than one vaccine at a time, and should not get a vaccination while ill. Nor are *all* of the CDC-recommended vaccines necessary -- many pediatricians recommend against the chickenpox (varicella) vaccine, for example. That "Before 2" schedule is a product of the CDC's goal of "protecting the herd"; it has nothing to do with protecting an individual child's health.

    Immunizations are important, but be sure to ask your child's pediatrician about the potential risks vs. the benefits, ask about alternative vaccination schedules, and make sure you know what your options are before you vaccinate.

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  • simfelicity's Avatar
    Posted by simfelicity Wed Aug 5, 2009 5:54am PDT

    i strongly recommend breast feeding...it provides bonding between the mother and child...

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  • __A_YAHOO_USER__'s Avatar
    Posted by __A_YAHOO_USER__ Wed Aug 5, 2009 6:02am PDT

    *#2 should read..."Be wise BEFORE you immunize." Immunization is a business like too many others, and PROFIT over RISK and HEALTH is always KING in a business.

    *#12 should have been #1

    and how's this for #13...?

    *#13 It takes a village to raise a child but don't let the village replace the parent...but I guess that goes with #11 too...

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  • Susanna's Avatar
    Posted by Susanna Wed Aug 5, 2009 6:13am PDT

    Wonderful ad. As a preganant mother to be, this is very helpful.

    Report Abuse
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