More than 25 separate studies have established that marital quality drops, often quite steeply, after the transition to parenthood.
Friday, February 6, 2009
For The Parents - Kids And Marriage Quality
NYT: Till Children Do Us Part
Respiratory Syncytial Virus
RSV is quite common in children under two. Know the symptoms and don't let your pediatrician try to talk you into allergy and asthma medications. However, if your child is wheezing get them to a hospital.
See: More children need medical help for RSV than previously known
After a couple of emergency room visits for RSV I developed this strategy to stop wheezing: make sure the child naps every day, even if that means walking for four hours and 20 miles; and lower any fever as soon as possible as I have a hunch the body's fever response is involved in constricting the esophageal lining leading to the wheezing which leads to low oxygen levels in the blood.
See: More children need medical help for RSV than previously known
More than 2 million children with Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) are seen in hospitals, emergency rooms and doctors' offices in the United States every year -- many more than doctors know. In fact, only 3 percent of children with RSV in an outpatient setting actually receive a diagnosis of RSV infection.
After a couple of emergency room visits for RSV I developed this strategy to stop wheezing: make sure the child naps every day, even if that means walking for four hours and 20 miles; and lower any fever as soon as possible as I have a hunch the body's fever response is involved in constricting the esophageal lining leading to the wheezing which leads to low oxygen levels in the blood.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Little Things Moms-to-Be Can Do
Visit farms regularly, get plenty of sunlight (or Vitamin D), and have a stimulating environment (seems Lamarckian).
See:
SciDaily: Farm Moms May Help Children Beat Allergies
PhysOrg: Sun In Pregnancy Builds Stronger Bones For Baby
TechReview: A Comeback for Lamarckian Evolution? Two new studies show that the effects of a mother's early environment can be passed on to the next generation.
See:
SciDaily: Farm Moms May Help Children Beat Allergies
PhysOrg: Sun In Pregnancy Builds Stronger Bones For Baby
TechReview: A Comeback for Lamarckian Evolution? Two new studies show that the effects of a mother's early environment can be passed on to the next generation.
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Revisiting The Hygiene Hypothesis
NYT: Babies Know: A Little Dirt Is Good for You
Dr. Ruebush deplores the current fetish for the hundreds of antibacterial products that convey a false sense of security and may actually foster the development of antibiotic-resistant, disease-causing bacteria. Plain soap and water are all that are needed to become clean, she noted.
“I certainly recommend washing your hands after using the bathroom, before eating, after changing a diaper, before and after handling food,” and whenever they’re visibly soiled, she wrote. When no running water is available and cleaning hands is essential, she suggests an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
Dr. Weinstock goes even further. “Children should be allowed to go barefoot in the dirt, play in the dirt, and not have to wash their hands when they come in to eat,” he said. He and Dr. Elliott pointed out that children who grow up on farms and are frequently exposed to worms and other organisms from farm animals are much less likely to develop allergies and autoimmune diseases.
Also helpful, he said, is to “let kids have two dogs and a cat,” which will expose them to intestinal worms that can promote a healthy immune system.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
First, Do No Harm
Don't let grandma rub Vicks on children under two.
See MSNBC: There’s the rub: Vicks might make kids sicker
See MSNBC: There’s the rub: Vicks might make kids sicker
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
College Admissions Confessions
Admissions officers are just as whimsical as anyone else. See the DailyBeast: Dirty Secrets of College Admissions
But in reading it I thought how is it any different in how some students pick a school? I picked my college because I liked their colors.
But in reading it I thought how is it any different in how some students pick a school? I picked my college because I liked their colors.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
That Teenage Feeling
USNews: How to Deploy the Amazing Power of the Teen Brain
This is why I call my parenting style "boundaries for failure".
...experts now are realizing that the popular parental response—to coddle teens in an attempt to shield them from every harm—actually may be counterproductive.
This is why I call my parenting style "boundaries for failure".
Labels:
boundaries for failure,
development,
education,
free-range,
teens
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Another Reason To Breast Feed
Better lung function later in life.
See MSNBC: Better lungs for kids fed from breast, not bottle
See MSNBC: Better lungs for kids fed from breast, not bottle
"The physical exercise caused by suckling at the breast — about six times daily on average for more than 4 months — may result in increased lung capacity and increased airflow in breast-fed children compared with bottle-fed children," Dr. Ikechukwu U. Ogbuanu
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Pregnancy And Caffeine
Study in mice indicates potential problems with two cups of coffee worth of caffeine.
See: A Low Dose Of Caffeine When Pregnant May Damage The Heart Of Offspring For A Lifetime
See: A Low Dose Of Caffeine When Pregnant May Damage The Heart Of Offspring For A Lifetime
Friday, December 19, 2008
Reminds Me Of The Candy Bar In The Pool Scene From Caddyshack

Fear of nuts creating hysteria of epidemic proportions
These extreme measures to reduce exposure to nuts are fuelling anxiety in parents, leading to more sensitisation, and creating the very epidemic they are designed to stop. A recent study has suggested that early exposure to peanuts actually reduces, rather than increases the risk of allergy.
Free Range Kids, Not Open Range
Via NPR: Texas Boy Hits Toy Mother Lode
A 4-year-old boy in Beaumont, Texas, apparently couldn't wait for Christmas. He unlocked a door at his home around 3 a.m. and walked into the street. He reached the the Family Dollar discount store on the other side and started trying doors. The store was closed, but somebody had left one door unlocked — which explains why, when police responded to the silent alarm, they discovered the boy eager to show them all his new toys.
More Boys Born After Wars
Apparently due to a "mystery" gene.
See: Boy Or Girl? It's In The Father's Genes
See: Boy Or Girl? It's In The Father's Genes
As the odds were in favour of men with more sons seeing a son return from the war, those sons were more likely to father boys themselves because they inherited that tendency from their fathers. In contrast, men with more daughters may have lost their only sons in the war and those sons would have been more likely to father girls. This would explain why the men that survived the war were more likely to have male children, which resulted in the boy-baby boom.
Friday, December 12, 2008
Preterm Infants And SIDS
A new hypothesis links the two via low blood pressure.
See: SIDS link: Low blood pressure in preterm infants
See: SIDS link: Low blood pressure in preterm infants
Would You Give Your Child A Smart Pill?
Commentary at Nature.com: Towards responsible use of cognitive-enhancing drugs by the healthy
In USNews: Boost Kids' Brainpower With a Pill
In USNews: Boost Kids' Brainpower With a Pill
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Vaccine For Autism Related Disorders Being Tested
See TechReview: Drug Trials for Autism
Three drugs will be tested in humans to treat rare, inherited conditions that are often linked to autism: Rett syndrome, fragile X, and tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Scientists hope that the new drugs, if successful in the current trials, will eventually help treat more common forms of autism, which affects about 1 in 166 children in the United States. Existing drugs are used to treat symptoms of autism, such as digestive problems and psychosis, rather than the root of the disease.
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Another Risk To Caesarean Births
See MSNBC: C-sections tied to higher asthma risk for babies: Natural birth helps prime infant’s immune system, researchers explain
Babies born by Caesarean section are more likely to develop asthma than children delivered naturally, Swiss researchers said on Tuesday.
There has been conflicting evidence on the link between asthma and C-sections but the researchers said the number of children involved in their study and a long monitoring period strengthened their results.
Lazy Sunday
NYT: Report Ties Children’s Use of Media to Their Health
Dr. Emanuel, whose brother, Rahm, is the president-elect’s chief of staff, said he was surprised by how lopsided the findings were. “We found very few studies that had any positive association” for children’s health, he said.
Researchers sought to look at the health effects of a wide array of media and distill 30 years of research into a simple message. “The average parent doesn’t understand that if you plop your kids down in front of the TV or the computer for five hours a day, it can change their brain development, it can make them fat, and it can lead them to get involved in risky sexual activity at a young age,” Mr. Steyer said.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Let Kids Choose Their Play
Parents who are different from me... who puts a 2 yr old in an organized sports class?
See: New genetic test asks which sport a child was born to play
See: New genetic test asks which sport a child was born to play
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