Cure the baby’s cold

Cure the baby’s cold

Infant Cyst

Infection, coughing, sneezing, coughing, coughing, coughing, coughing, coughing and coughing are common. It is still in the growth stage.

Catarrh is a non-serious infectious disease common to winter, and we will learn more about the causes of infection in infants and ways of prevention and treatment.

Symptoms of a baby’s cold

  • The baby feels tired and has little movement.
  • Pain in the pharynx.
  • Cough, sneezing, sneezing, nose and eye redness.
  • The infant loses his appetite.
  • Lymph node hyperplasia.
  • His voice changes and falls so that the mother feels the presence of his voice.
  • High temperature.

Ways to protect the baby from cold

  • The need to place the child in a warm place in the winter and warm it well.
  • Avoid approaching the baby by people with colds.
  • Avoid smoking in your baby.
  • Avoid using a baby towel for more than a day.
  • Do not exaggerate spray spray on baby clothes, which may cause the sensitivity and then the cold.
  • Ventilation of the room where the child is present on a daily basis.

Treatment of colds

  • Be careful to feed the baby (breastfeeding) at least three times a day, because breast milk enhances the child’s resistance and also contains anti-diseases.
  • Use of nose lotion (saline solution).
  • Place the baby vertically so as not to feel suffocation due to accumulation of mucus.
  • Fat the baby’s nose with a little Vaseline to moisturize.
  • Putting the baby in warm water reduces the temperature in his body, reduces muscle pain, and avoids the use of cold water.
  • Moisturize his room by steam.
  • Avoid coughing medicines unless you consult your doctor.
  • Give plenty of fluids such as water and natural juices that help to increase moisture in the body.
  • Leave the baby sleeping for long enough.
  • Give the child an antihypertensive if he is older than three months with a prescription.

Consult your doctor

  • If the mother does not feel better within 3 days and the temperature continues to rise, to avoid sinus infections.
  • If the temperature has become normal and the mother did not feel better her child, to avoid being infected with nasal infections.
  • If the child has difficulty breathing and coughing heavily accompanied with phlegm and perspiration.
  • If the temperature reaches above thirty-nine degrees Celsius.
  • When the amount of lactation decreases.
  • When lymphatic hyperplasia appears in the neck area.
  • When there is pain in the abdomen, chest or ears.