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These methods can effectively address childhood malnutrition. 

    page views:1  Publication date:2023-04-29  
With societal development and improved living standards, families today generally place great importance on their children, wanting to provide the best in everything from food and clothing to education and play. However, even under these circumstances, some children still suffer from malnutrition and require treatment. What should be done about childhood malnutrition? Are there any home remedies?
Home remedies for childhood malnutrition
1. Hawthorn and Yam Soup
Take 9 grams of hawthorn, 15 grams of yam, and 25 grams of white sugar, decoct them into a soup, and drink it as tea. Take one dose daily for one week. This formula is suitable for infantile malnutrition due to spleen deficiency.
Hawthorn can help stimulate appetite and aid digestion, so it's the ingredient in our first recommended remedy. In fact, this remedy isn't just for children; adults and the elderly can also benefit from it.
2. Ginseng and Astragalus Pigeon Soup
Take one young pigeon, remove any feathers and internal organs. Grind 10 grams of Codonopsis pilosula, 15 grams of Astragalus membranaceus, and 9 grams of Atractylodes macrocephala into a coarse powder, wrap it in cloth, and stuff it into the pigeon's abdomen. Steam the pigeon until tender. Drink the broth and eat the meat. Consume one dose every three days, for 4-6 consecutive days. This formula is suitable for those with deficiency of both qi and blood.
3. Pomegranate peel soup
Take 30 grams of pomegranate peel, decoct it in water, add an appropriate amount of sugar and mix well, then drink it as a tea substitute.
These three folk remedies are for treating malnutrition in children. Although they seem very simple, as long as you follow the recipes, you can quickly alleviate the malnutrition in children.
Some parents may not have taken their children for a checkup to see if they are malnourished. That's okay. You can read the following introduction and you'll know immediately whether your child is malnourished.
Symptoms of malnutrition
Signal 1: Being too short, too thin, or too fat all indicate nutritional imbalance.
Indicators of physical growth and development in children generally include developmental level, growth rate, and body symmetry, among which height, weight, and head circumference are important references. Generally speaking, height and weight within the reference range are considered normal.
A child's growth and development are influenced by many factors, such as genetics, nutrition, sleep, and exercise. Among these acquired factors, nutrition has a significant impact. Especially before the age of three, if a child's nutrition is inadequate, their height and weight will lag behind.
Of course, some children also become obese due to overnutrition caused by their inability to control their eating habits. Parents should pay attention to this nutritional imbalance to avoid the risk of developing chronic diseases in adulthood.
Signal 2: Slow reaction time, not thinking fast enough
Early malnutrition can reduce the rate of brain cell division, leading to dysfunction of neuroregulation and delayed motor and language development. Therefore, if you notice that your child has recently become unresponsive, takes a long time to answer when called, cannot understand lessons, seems unable to process information, or quickly forgets or cannot remember what has been taught, you should be alert.
Signal 3: Decreased immunity, weak constitution and frequent illness
A deficiency in certain vitamins and trace elements (such as zinc and iron) can lead to a decline in cellular and humoral immune function, making children more susceptible to illness and infection. Therefore, if a child experiences recurrent colds, gingivitis, folliculitis, angular cheilitis, glossitis, or keratitis, it may indicate a deficiency in trace elements.
Signal 4: A fondness for meat, sweets, and fried foods, along with constipation and bad breath.
Some nutritional imbalances can also manifest in daily diets. For example, many children prefer meat, sweets, and fried foods, while neglecting vegetables, fruits, and other fiber-rich foods. Over time, this inevitably leads to nutritional imbalances. Children are also prone to constipation due to slowed intestinal motility. When feces remain in the intestines for too long, harmful toxins are produced, resulting in bad breath.
Signal 5: Mood swings, or vitamin B deficiency
Some parents easily overlook the issue of nutritional imbalances in their children's psychological and emotional responses during their growth. B vitamins can indirectly affect a person's mood by regulating the human nervous system. Vitamin B1 deficiency can lead to irritability and mood swings; insufficient vitamin B6 intake can cause agitation, drowsiness, and restlessness; and vitamin B12 deficiency can cause sluggishness.
Causes of malnutrition in babies
1. Improper feeding
Long-term feeding problems, such as insufficient complementary breast milk and early supplementation; artificial feeding, where the quality and quantity of food are not met, such as diluted milk or feeding only starchy foods; sudden weaning, where the infant cannot adapt to the new food.
2. Poor eating habits
Irregular eating habits, picky eating, rumination, or nervous vomiting may occur. Due to insufficient nutrient intake, the body's digestive and absorption functions are not perfect, leading to the mobilization of glycogen and subsequent consumption of fat and protein, resulting in a negative nitrogen balance. Plasma proteins, blood sugar, and cholesterol all decrease, and the basal metabolic rate is only 70% or lower than that of normal children.
3. Disease factors
Illness affects appetite, hinders the digestion, absorption, and utilization of food, and increases the body's consumption. Common diseases that easily lead to malnutrition include: persistent infantile diarrhea, chronic enteritis or dysentery, malabsorption syndromes caused by various enzyme deficiencies, intestinal parasitic diseases, tuberculosis, measles, recurrent respiratory infections, and chronic urinary tract infections.
Certain congenital malformations of the digestive tract (such as cleft lip, congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis, or esophageal laxity) and severe congenital heart disease can all lead to feeding difficulties.
4. Hereditary metabolic disorders
Certain inherited metabolic disorders and immunodeficiency diseases can also affect the digestion, absorption, and utilization of food. Premature birth and twin pregnancies are prone to malnutrition. Intrauterine infection, maternal illness or malnutrition, and abnormalities in placental and umbilical cord structure and function can all lead to insufficient fetal nutrition and intrauterine growth retardation, which are prerequisites for infant malnutrition. Severe malnutrition is mostly caused by multiple factors.
It's okay for a child to be malnourished, as long as it's detected in time and addressed promptly. Some parents get very anxious when they see their child is malnourished and immediately feed them all the nutritious foods available. However, this is not scientifically sound, as children have limited absorption capacity and this approach might even burden their digestive system.

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