Eat Right: Building a strong stomach for better immunity

Try to ensure that they get at least 7–8 hours of uninterrupted sleep per night.

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Last Updated on June 15, 2022 by The Health Master

Eat Right: Building a strong stomach for better immunity

Managing your child’s stress levels

Stress can negatively affect our microbiome. Establishing balance in our life will support our mental and emotional health and optimise our gut and overall health.

Nowadays, even children are susceptible to stress. Some ways to lower stress may include meditation, walking, spending time with friends or family, using essential oils, laughing, yoga, or having a pet.

To keep stress away, teach your child to walk away from things not meant for them.

Ensuring sufficient and timely sleep

Getting enough good-quality sleep can improve mood, cognition, and gut health. Ensure your children establish healthy sleep habits by putting them to bed and waking them up at the same time each day.

Try to ensure that they get at least 7–8 hours of uninterrupted sleep per night.

You may inculcate the following habits for a good night’s sleep:

  • An early light dinner.
  • Refrain from watching TV or exposure to any artificial light for at least one hour prior to going to bed.
  • A warm shower or bath helps prior to going to sleep.
  • Sleeping on the left side is usually recommended.
  • Listening to Yog Nidra or a nice slow music just before hitting the pillow.
  • Switch off the WiFi and, if they are allowed cell phones, make sure they keep the devices away while going to bed.

Avoid giving children excessive antibiotics and pain killers

Antibiotics are prescribed to combat bacterial infections but over prescription and overuse can damage the gut microbiota and immunity.

Up to even six months of antibiotic consumption, the gut may still lack several species of beneficial bacteria.

Stomach infections and flu that can be managed more conservatively with home remedies and rest should be treated without antibiotics especially in smaller children.

Try and buy dairy and meat products that are not treated with antibiotics.

Teach children to eat slowly and chew their food to a liquid

Chewing our food thoroughly and eating our meals more slowly can help promote full digestion and absorption of nutrients.

Chewing food allows starches to get properly broken down in the mouth and reduces acid reflux.

It initiates better protein breakdown in the stomach preventing bloating and gas. Eating food slowly instead of on-the-go can restore gut health and replenish gut microbiome.

Change what they eat

  • Reduce processed, packaged, ready-to-eat, order in, canned high-sugar, and fried foods
  • Include plenty of plant-based foods and lean protein in your child’s diet
  • A diet high in fibre has been shown to contribute tremendously to a healthy gut microbiome
  • Ensure consumption of less sugar and sweeteners. Eating sugar or artificial sweeteners may cause gut dysbiosis

Gut-healthy foods include:

  • High-fibre foods such as legumes, beans, peas, rolled oats, bananas, berries, asparagus, and leeks
  • Raw garlic, ginger, onion and cooked tubers such as sweet potato, colocasia and yam
  • Raw papaya, raw mango, peppers, beetroot and turnips have prebiotic fibre
  • Fermented foods such as kanji, homemade pickles, kimchi, sauerkraut, yogurt, tempeh, miso, and kefir are great dietary sources of probiotics
  • Collagen-boosting foods such as bone broth, mushrooms, nut milks, leeks, tomatoes and salmon may be beneficial to overall health and gut health specifically

Get rid of toxins in the environment that can destroy the good bugs in the gut

Just as antibiotics can disrupt the gut microbiota, so too can disinfectants, hygiene and cleaning products. Some common ones are:

1. Bisphenol A (BPA) found in many plastic products, as well as food and drink packaging. BPA has been linked to a range of health effects, but it has also been shown to reduce and change microbiome diversity

2. Phthalates found in plastic products as well as personal care products, particularly in fragrances and perfumes. They are hormone disruptors which can affect fertility and male development. They also can disrupt the microbiome

3. Triclosan is an antibacterial used in some personal-care products such as antibacterial soaps, toothpaste, deodorants, cosmetics, plastic toys and laundry products. It is made specifically to kill bacteria, good or bad. It also is a known hormone disruptor. Researchers found that triclosan can alter the microbiome in animals and humans

Wishing you good health and healthful bacteria!

By Manjari Chandra
She is a consultant, functional nutrition and nutritional medicine, Manjari Wellness, New Delhi.

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