tigerchild PARENTING



message board

comments

about tigerchild

help

login/join us

advanced search

FAILURE TO THRIVE

By Dr. Catherine Gant

If you feel that your baby is not growing properly get him or her measured by a health visitor and compare the length or height and weight to the charts and their previous measurements. His growth may be completely normal according to the charts.

All children are different and there is a huge variation in what is normal, especially in the pre-school years. See Growth Charts. There is also a huge difference in how much each individual baby or toddler eats, an issue that causes a lot of maternal angst.

If you are concerned about your child’s growth or eating habits:

  • Keep a really accurate food diary for a few days. Often looking at it can solve the problem; just one biscuit may take the edge off a child’s hunger, or a bottle of milk may need to be dropped to encourage more solids to be eaten.
  • Keep snacks healthy and to a minimum if you are worried about poor eating at meals.
  • Don’t avoid fat in the diet. Babies need fat for growth and brain development and a diet that is healthy for an adult trying to lose weight will not provide enough fat for a child. Don’t use semi-skimmed milk or low-fat products.

CAUSES OF FAILURE TO THRIVE

·        Not getting enough calories: poor diet, not enough fat in foods or certain milks or milk substitutes.

·        Feeding problems: meal times have become a battleground, parents are over anxious or the child has been allowed to develop fads and ridiculous rituals associated with eating.

·        Illness: recurrent ear and throat infections, chicken pox, measles, surgery and many other illnesses can cause weight loss and poor weight gain. Chronic illnesses like cystic fibrosis, diabetes and coeliac disease affect digestion. Also neurological damage can affect swallowing and weight gain.

·        Genetics: certain body types run in families. Children have growth spurts and pubertal growth spurts at different ages. The parent’s height also affects the child’s growth.

·        Constitutional delay: this also runs in families where both parents will have been small as children. The child is smaller and shorter than you would expect and the bone development is also delayed. These children usually catch up and grow normally.

·        Hormonal: growth hormone and thyroid hormone deficiencies can delay growth.

·        Depression: if the mother has exhaustion or depression, or the child is miserable, they may not grow properly.

If you are concerned, do seek specialist advice even if it is only to put your mind at rest. Often it seems that other people’s children tuck into huge plates of food and vegetables and grow to enormous heights and this can be worrying.

In most cases your child’s growth will turn out to be completely normal. Your health visitor or doctor will be happy to give you reassurance.

It is nonetheless important to detect problems like hypothyroidism as soon as possible and to start any treatment early.

FURTHER INFORMATION

Read this article from the British Medical Journal on doctors’ evaluation of short stature.

 









Tigerchild a parent's encyclopaedia Sitemap 2 4