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Informative Articles

Your Perfectly Pampered Pregnancy Guide To Treating Colds and Flu
As winter draws near, the threat of colds and the flu looms large. If you happen to be pregnant right now, doctors say you should be doubly careful, since even a simple virus can leave you feeling more stuffy, as well as achier and crankier...

Vitamin Supplements and Your Child
In a perfect world, your children would eat a balanced diet with the right amount of fruits and vegetables recommended by nutritional standards. However, we all know that rarely happens. Many children do not like and sometimes refuse to eat some...

The 6 Common Types of Anaemia
Copyright 2005 Anne Wolski There are several types and classifications of anaemia. This is a condition in which the body lacks the amount of red blood cells to keep up with the body's demand for oxygen. Understanding the different...

How to Get Your Pre-pregnancy Body Back
Copyright 2005 Joey Atlas The second biggest question you will ask yourself as a new mom is, "Will I be able to get back into shape after I give birth?" (The first, of course, is, "Will I be a good mother?") The truth is, yes, you can get back into...

Coping With an Unplanned Pregnancy
Your period is late and you start to think maybe you might be pregnant. Maybe you are afraid to go take a test because you don't want to find out the results. You may be asking yourself "how could this happen"? If you find yourself pregnant with...

 
Baby Food and Diaper Rash

Although having a diaper rash is part and parcel of being a baby, when your baby starts solids, the combination of baby food and diaper rash can go hand in hand, as a result of food allergies. But there are things you can do to avoid food allergies.

First, start by introducing a new food to your baby by applying a little bit of the food to her cheek, and wait 20 minutes. If there is no reaction, give 1 teaspoon of the new food and wait four hours. The reaction you are looking for (and hopefully not getting!) is red cheeks, irritability, runny nose, colic, constipation or diarrhea, gas, insomnia or other skin reactions.

Whenever I gave egg to my daughter Hana, her cheeks would go red immediately. As she got older, that went away.

Citrus fruits are very acidic and should also be avoided until your baby is 12-18 months. Other highly allergenic foods are strawberries, peanut butter, cow's milk, eggs, shellfish and soy.

It is important to keep track when you introduce a new baby food and diaper rash can then be observed and connected to the new food that was introduced. You do not need to limit that food forever, just wait six months or so and then try again.

Some of the least allergenic foods for baby are: carrot, broccoli, asparagus, squash, zucchini, sweet potato, turnip, beets, dark leafy greens, pear, peaches, blueberries, blackberries, currents and breastmilk. These are what your baby should eat until 9 months of age.

About the author:

Suzanne Doyle-Ingram is the creator of the Pregnancy Leads to New Babies.com website, an informative site for pregnant women and new moms, which provides information on pregnancy, labor, and how to take care of your new baby.

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