"Ahhhhhhhhhhhh
These are probably the two voices that moms are most afraid of hearing
Because this means that the baby is likely to have a cold again
But here's the thing
Do you really understand the "opponent" of the cold?
You know
Probably wrong!

Cold is because of a cold?
Baby a cold, are you so reflective
Is it because it was cold in the shower last night?
Or did you kick the quilt last night?
But that's not really accurate
The real "culprit" that causes a cold is a pathogen infection. When the body's immune system is weakened, the cold pathogen will more easily break through the immune system's defense line, and the body will have cold symptoms.
When the temperature is lowered, the body's immunity will become weaker. At this time, the cold virus is naturally easy to take advantage of the void, and "cold" symptoms such as sneezing, fever, and cough appear.
Therefore, in the final analysis, when you have a cold, because of the virus, the cold is just a small fuse.
Cold and fever to cover the heat?
It is easy for people to have such a misunderstanding
A cold is caused by a cold
Then wear more clothes and cover up a sweat and you'll be fine
But this sentence is not true before and after
For fever, sweating is the result of antipyretics, not the cause of fever. That sweat is because of the heat dissipation of itself during the antipyretic stage, not covered up.
Babies under the age of 3 themselves have a very weak ability to regulate the body, and when they have a cold and fever, the body surface temperature will be very high. At this time, it is too tight, not only can not let the baby dehemote, but it is easy to collapse.
In fact, it would be more comfortable for your baby to put on a warm towel or take a warm bath than to cover the heat.
Old cold means
My baby has low immunity?
Parents are most afraid of their babies getting sick
Especially when you catch a cold every month or two
It's easy to suspect that it's low resistance
But not necessarily!
Babies with low immunity are indeed more likely to catch colds, but the number of "more" colds in the baby does not mean that immunity is necessarily worse than that of peers.
On average, young children catch colds 6-8 times a year. If he enters kindergarten, or if he has siblings who are also school-age children, it is easy to infect each other, and the number of times will be more frequent.
Our focus is on:
Do a good job of prevention (away from people with colds, often ventilate at home, reduce the density of germs);
Breastfeeding consistently (many of the nutrients in breast milk can help your baby build self-protection);
Maintain a balanced diet after adding complementary foods...
These all contribute to the development of your baby's own immune system.