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Is It Okay To Use Essential Oil for Relieving Kid’s Fever?

Filed Under (CHILDREN HEALTH, HEALTH TIPS) by on 09-10-2008

Who says that essential oil is only for adults? Children can also get the benefits from essential oil, including for relieving fever safely. The differences are only on the dosages and dilutions that are generally significantly lower for your little one, comparing to those used with adults. Dilutions for caring touch massage, for example, can start as low as 1 drop per ounce of carrier for newborns. The child’s weight and overall condition also must be considered. A child that is big for their age could use slightly higher amounts of essential oil, comparing to a child that is weak from illness.

So, what about using essential oil for relieving your kid’s fever? Here are the tips for you: Read the rest of this entry »

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DO’S AND DONT’S FOR YOUR KID’S COLD AND COUGH

Filed Under (CHILDREN HEALTH, HEALTH TIPS) by on 09-10-2008

Here are the things that you should and shouldn’t do when your kid gets cold and cough:

* DON’T use cough and cold drugs if your kid is under 4 years old!

About 7,000 children under 11 go to emergency rooms each year after taking cough and cold medicines, according to the CDC. Roughly two-thirds of those occurred after children drank medication while unsupervised, according to the CDC. Currently, leading makers of over-the-counter pediatric cough and cold drugs has changed their label on the product. According Consumer Healthcare Products Association (CHPA) the label will say: DON’T GIVE OVER-THE-COUNTER PEDIATRIC COUGH AND COLD MEDICINE TO CHILDREN YOUNGER THAN 4. The new labels will start showing up on store shelves this year. But, the CHPA says there are no plans to take products with the old labels off the shelves since the FDA hasn’t indicated a need to do so.

* DON’T you ever give multiple products at the same time

Believe me! You must follow this advice, because these words are not from me but from Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. She also said that parents should follow, very carefully, the directions on the package.

* DON’T use drugs to make your kid sleepy

Don’t use over-the-counter pediatric cough and cold drugs containing antihistamines to sedate or make your kid sleepy. So, please do read the contents of the drug, will you?

Read the rest of this entry »

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NEW TEST FOR DETECTING DOWN SYNDROME

Filed Under (Baby, CHILDREN HEALTH, KIDS HEALTH NEWS) by on 09-10-2008

Are you pregnant and worried about the risks of amniocentesis and other available tests for chromosomal disorders such as Down syndrome? There is a good news for you! The safer test may be on the horizon! This new technique, as described in Proceeding of the National Academy of Sciences, takes advantage of fetal DNA in pregnant woman’s blood. The technique that is developed by Stanford University and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital scans for fetal aneuploidy, an abnormality in the number of fetal chromosomes.

Down syndrome is a type of aneuploidy that arises from extra copy of chromosome 21. Based on that, the researchers used samples from 12 women with aneuploid pregnancies and 6 with normal pregnancies. They found that women from the first group had more chromosome 21 fragments in their blood than the women with normal pregnancies. This test has the potential to detect other forms of aneuploidy too and could lead to earlier diagnosis of fetal aneuploidy because the fetal DNA shows up in maternal blood early in pregnancy.

SOURCE: Stanford University, news release, Oct. 6, 2008

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