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Q&A: My kids get frequent colds. Is this normal? Can I help?


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Question: My kids tend to get frequent colds once school and day care start. Is this normal? How can I minimize their symptoms?

Andrea Candee responds: Statistics indicate that the average American schoolchild has several colds a year. Comforted falsely by statistics, parents accept all manner of cold and flu as “normal childhood diseases.” “After all,” we tell ourselves, “it could be worse. What’s a case of the sniffles or the odd ear infection now and then? It’s something all kids need to go through.”

This is erroneous thinking. Health, not sickness, is the body’s normal state of being. Just because all the other kids at school are sick doesn’t mean yours have to be. You can maintain a respectable level of wellness for your child even in the face of the nastiest colds and flu.

Herbs are especially useful in healing flare-ups of the upper respiratory system. Many of the therapies presented below are preventive, so the old adage that “all kids get sick” doesn’t have to prove true in your home — it certainly didn’t in mine!

Sore throats
Gargles are an age-old method of bringing soothing substances to sore throats. To see if your child is capable of gargling liquids:

• Have her hold a small mouthful of plain water towards the back of the throat.
• If this is easily done, gargling can become a fun activity by vocalizing, causing the liquid to vibrate.
• If vocalizing makes your child uncomfortable, simply have her retain the liquid in the throat while you count, encouraging her to hold it a moment longer.
• Be sure the liquid is expectorated (spit out) so the toxins drawn out from the swollen tissue are not swallowed.

Salty Lemon Gargle
The astringent properties of lemon juice and common table salt (or for a more pure version, sea salt, found in all health food stores), when combined with warm water and used as a gargle, shrink swollen tissue. As a result, this classic blend reduces the inflammation and pain of sore throats while providing excellent anti-microbial protection.

• Combine the juice of half a lemon with one tablespoon of salt in 1/2 cup warm water.
• Have your child gargle with this mixture at least four times a day.
• To further enhance the astringency and anti-microbial action of this gargle, mix the lemon and salt into 1/2 cup of sage tea instead of plain water.

Grapefruit Seed Gargle
The extract of the grapefruit seed contains potent anti-microbial as well as astringent constituents that help relieve an inflamed, sore throat.

• Add 4-6 drops of grapefruit seed extract (purchased in health food stores) to1/2 glass of water.
• Have your child gargle with the diluted extract, spitting it out after each gargle.

Throat-healing herbs
In addition to the herbs you would give for a cold, a sore throat may be comforted with:

• slippery elm lozenges (available at health food stores).
• a diluted spray of echinacea and goldenseal, sprayed on the back of the throat. To make this anti-microbial spray, dilute 10 drops of each herb in 4 ounces of water.
• a spoonful of honey, which is anti-inflammatory as well as anti-microbial, a traditional remedy for soothing the throats of opera singers before performances. Your child can lick the honey right off the spoon to experience its soothing properties as it slides down her irritated throat.
• a room vaporizer containing eucalyptus oil. The vaporizer’s hydrating mist soothes a dry, irritated throat while the eucalyptus emits its anti-microbial properties into the surrounding air.
• a tea/gargle of the soothing, anti-inflammatory herbs licorice root and slippery elm bark.
• a gargle with sage or raspberry leaf tea, effective astringents, helping reduce the swollen tissue of a sore throat.

Soothing a congested chest
When your child’s chest feels tight as a result of cold or flu and coughing is painful, a ginger rub will bring herbal heat to the chest. Ginger’s stimulating properties increase circulation and help loosen things up, with greater comfort being the happy result. I can remember times when this remedy was so effective that the next night my son required an onion pack to stop the incessant coughing from all the loosened phlegm!

To prepare this rub, mix together 1 tablespoon each of powdered ginger purchased from a health food store (where it will not have been irradiated) and a non-petrolated petroleum jelly (also available at a health food store). The mixture will look rather like brown frosting. But don’t eat it — spread it on your child’s chest, then cover with a cotton T-shirt. A reddening of the area is normal and indicates that the ginger is increasing circulation to the capillaries near the surface of the skin. In the morning, the petroleum jelly will have been absorbed and the ginger will have worked its magic, as indicated by your child’s ability to breathe more easily.

Another wonderful reason to use ginger: A Brigham Young University study revealed that this herb significantly decreased nausea and diarrhea associated with the 24-hour flu.

Aromatic Congestion Oil
Blending together any of the following oils will create a treatment that deeply penetrates tissue, stimulating blood flow to the lung area, helping to open air passages. In addition, the herbs are anti-inflammatory and anti-microbial.

• Thyme
• Eucalyptus
• Peppermint
• Lavender
• Anise
• Cinnamon
• Hyssop

For children under 8 years of age, blend 6 drops of combined essential oils in a teaspoon of carrier oil such as almond, apricot kernel or grape seed. For the older child, increase the dilution to 10 drops to the teaspoon of oil. The congestion oil may be rubbed on the chest and back in the morning, afternoon and at bedtime. Cover with a cotton shirt. Continue treatment until congestion loosens and your child is more comfortable.You may expect a slight reddening of the skin due to the oils’ circulatory enhancing effect. If your child exhibits more than just a slight reddening or a rash, discontinue use.

Several drops of the congestion oil may be used in a bath. For inhalations, add a few drops of the congestion oil to a pot of hot water, encouraging your child to breathe deeply over the water. Several drops of the oil may also be added to a vaporizer.

Echinacea
Echinacea’s immune-enhancing properties may be called to action to help the body fight off the respiratory infection. Its chemical properties help to slow the spread of infection while enhancing immune function in the lymphatic system and mucus membranes.

Give oral doses of echinacea every two hours until the symptoms diminish and three times a day thereafter until your child is totally well. For an in-depth discussion of echinacea, see Chapter 12: “Immune System Enhancers” in my book, Gentle Healing for Baby and Child (Simon & Schuster).

Cold and Flu Tea
Upper and lower respiratory symptoms respond well to the healing properties of the herbs contained in this soothing, decongesting tea. A large quantity of the dried herbs can be mixed and stored in an air-tight jar.

• 4 parts echinacea
• 2 parts sage leaf
• 2 parts eucalyptus
• 1 part ginger root
• 1 part thyme leaf

How effective is this natural tea? Let’s run down the all-star list of the ingredients’ properties.

• Echinacea stimulates the immune system and is anti-microbial.
• Sage leaf detoxifies and decongests.
• Eucalyptus leaf decongests and is anti-microbial.
• Ginger root detoxifies and stimulates circulation.
• Thyme is a decongestant and anti-microbial.

To prepare this tea, steep 1 teaspoon of the combined herbs in 1 cup boiled water, covered, for 15 minutes. Several cups can be made at one time, warming as needed. Initially, an ounce or two may be given every 15 minutes, until relief is experienced, and then 1/4 to 1/2 cup every two to three hours, as needed. Natural honey may be used to sweeten the tea.

Garlic Fever Reducer
To bring down a high fever, especially when associated with bronchial congestion, put enough fresh cloves of garlic in a blender to make a paste that will spread ¼” thick on gauze. Lightly coat the soles of your child’s feet with olive oil so the garlic does not irritate them. Affix the garlic gauze pads to the soles of the feet with roller gauze; cover with cotton socks. Leave on overnight, provide plenty of water to drink and watch the fever go down. If necessary, more garlic paste may be applied as it is absorbed by the body.

By the way, garlic is so powerfully absorbed throughout the soles of the feet that in short time, your child will have garlic breath!

Editor’s Note: There are some concerns with the use of garlic on the skin of the child. One option is to not place the paste on the child’s feet directly but THROUGH the gauze. However, you should thoroughly research this and speak with your natural practitioner first.

Dr. Christopher’s Super-Immune Formula
Consisting of fresh garlic juice, apple cider vinegar and other potent anti-microbial herbs, this is an excellent therapy for active respiratory infection. This syrup is also an excellent post-infection support for the body as it recuperates.

• From infancy to age 4, give 1/8-1/4 teaspoon three or four times a day.
• Ages 5-10 should receive 1/4-1/2 teaspoon.
• Ages 10 and older, 1/2 to 1 teaspoon.
• This syrup has a strong taste and is more palatable diluted in a bit of juice.

Drink those fluids
The best and most important fluid for the body is good quality water. At all times but especially during periods of illness, the body’s need for water must be met to enable the proper manufacturing of proteins, enzymes and hormones. When the body is physically compromised, it must be kept well hydrated so that its chemical processes facilitate healing and the flushing of toxins — and this is especially true for infants and children.

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Purchase the items mentioned in this article from Mountain Rose Herbs.
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© Andrea Candee

Andrea Candee is a master herbalist, media expert, nationally known lecturer and author of the award-winning Gentle Healing for Baby and Child (Simon & Schuster), which received The National parenting Center’s Seal of Approval. Andrea is noted nationally for her unique and successful approach to Lyme Disease. She lives and maintains a consultation health practice in New York and shares much of her knowledge at www.AndreaCandee.com.





4 Responses to “Q&A: My kids get frequent colds. Is this normal? Can I help?”

1 Sanj says:

as stated in this article, we used garlic a way to reduce the fever our daughter had. We applied olive oil before applying raw garlic paste. After 2 hours of the garlic on the baby’s feet, she was screaming with discomfort. There was irritation on her feet as well as blisters starting to appear. I don’t feel this is a safe holistic healing method. Can you please let me know what happened????

2 publisher says:

I’ve asked the author about the question and here’s Andrea’s reply:

I’m wondering if she applied the garlic paste directly to the feet after applying the olive oil, or she applied the garlic paste to the gauze and then to the olive oil on the feet.

If there was a good coating of olive oil, there should have been no blistering or irritation unless, of course, this child has a sensitivity to garlic. It’s hard to say.

All best,
Andrea

3 sanj says:

Thank you for getting back to me. After doing some more research on the net, I have found that garlic on the skin can cause blisters and in some instances 2nd degree burns. I don’t feel this should be an option for a way to reduce fevers. The only way a parent will find out is when it’s too late!

4 publisher says:

Definitely go with your gut and research on this. Always research everything thoroughly before trying it.

See your doctor or natural care practitioner if concerned or before using the suggestions in our articles. Our articles do not replace the actual care of a practitioner.

And thank you for bringing this to our attention!




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