4 Essential Pearls for Drug Free Child Wellness

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Non-Intervention Child Wellness

This article was originally published here.

A mother's hand is the finest-gauged instrument available when it comes to assessing the presence of a fever in her child. When I felt my daughter's head this morning, I knew her body was in a state of inner turmoil, and my mind leapt to my pantry of herbs, homeopathy, and nutrients.

You see, I haven't entirely unlearned my "fix it" interventionist ways that I spent the better part of a decade having drilled into my mind, heart, and body. That said, I've put a tremendous amount of effort into "unlearning" the one illness, one drug model of modern medicine, and have come to appreciate just how little we do know about the intricate mechanisms set up to optimize our survival in a hostile world.

Here are some of the pearls that I bring to my day to day interfacing with my children's health:

1. Don't Be Scared

Harm befalling our children is hard-wired to inspire fear and vigilance. It is natural.

In fact, "fever phobia" has persisted for decades according to this article in Pediatrics, driven by innate parental fearfulness and collusion by doctors in recommending interventions for pediatric fever. This is why it's so hard to truly sit back and allow the dance of the immune system and nature to take its sophisticated, but ultimately limited course, when it comes to run of the mill illness in childhood.

This is easier for me to say because I have been trained to determine when a presentation constitutes an emergency and when it doesn't. Part of releasing the fear is appreciating that our bodies have evolved to eradicate pathogens, and to detoxify themselves, and that, in the setting of a generally supported immune system (nutrient-dense, low sugar diet, adequate sleep and movement, pure water and air), our children's bodies will take care of themselves.

I encourage my older daughter to think about the power of her body to heal itself. At night, before bed, we give the "soldiers" (aka her white blood cells) a list of minor tasks to manage, like scrapes and cuts. It is challenging to cultivate trust in our bodies, particularly because we want to do something, which inherently implies that our bodies are inadequate and need help. The something that we do; however, can take the form of supporting the body or interfering with its processes in the name of symptom eradication.

2. Supporting Rather Than Medicating

My children have never taken medication or antibiotics.

I believe it to be at odds with their growth and development, and view these interventions as those recruited for life or death scenarios after failure of natural alternatives, which in many cases are as effective without side effects or prolonging illness, such as elderberry for the flu.

The study of "complementary and alternative medicine" treatments in child wellness is hindered by lack of standardization and quality control of products, suboptimal dosing, and heterogeneity of patients.

The medical establishment is also biased against natural supplements and focused on demonstrating harm while they routinely apply intended-for-adult pharmaceuticals to children for indications without an evidence-base for safety or efficacy.

Anti-inflammatory medications like Motrin and Tylenol disrupt the body's sophisticated immune response and may promote onset of chronic atopic illnesses such as asthma because they deplete the body's most powerful antioxidant, glutathione.

Antibiotics are becoming increasingly maligned for their overprescription, their ability to disrupt the microbial balance in the gut, and for their cellular toxicity.

I know that moms often need to "do something," and I can relate to this. This is why my preference is to support the body's innate immune response, and to recognize that fever and other symptoms that may arise, are signs of appropriate repair.

For this reason, I turn to:

  • child-friendly botanicals, which communicate with the body on sophisticated levels without risk of adverse effects at conservative doses
  • homeopathy which is an energetic medicine that uses nanoparticles to shift and educate the body about a more adaptive response
  • immune support nutrients such as zinc, vitamin A, C, D, and probiotics, and
  • comfort measures like essential oils, vaporizers, baths, and rubs.

You can even look to traditional therapeutic foods for their healing value, going no further than a homemade chicken soup for its antibiotic activity!

My favorite go-to resource is this one by Andrea Candee, a natural healer who recommends household foods and herbs for treatment.

3. Learn to Trust Yourself Rather Than Your Doctor

The more holistically-oriented moms I know have the same desires – to protect and nourish their children – and the same fears – of missing an opportunity to intervene or choosing the wrong intervention – as more conventionally-minded moms.

The difference is in where we have vested our trust.

See the whole article here.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of GreenMedInfo or its staff.

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