Giving a tasty delight of peanut butter to your babies can significantly reduce the ongoing inflammatory reaction in your babies.
Research unveils this crucial finding, shedding light on the possibilities of saving your babies. Nearly 5% of the children undergo peanut butter allergic reaction. Unfortunately, some can be fatal.
Peanut butter allergy is most common among children when they try it for the first time. This anaphylactic reaction can vary from mild to severe. A person can experience difficulty in breathing, throat swelling, low blood pressure, and ultimately faintness.
Therefore, this research is a blessing in disguise for those allergic babies. However, experts suggest not giving solid food to six-month-old babies, but no authentic research support this theory.
Follow these guidelines, if you can’t tell what’s the right time to give solid food to your baby;
- Baby is able to hold the sitting posture.
- Can swallow food easily
- Respond while eating
King’s College London has postulated a data, indicating the effectiveness of peanut butter for six months old babies or younger. If an appropriate amount of peanut butter is given to babies, they will less likely suffer from these severe reactions.
Further, these allergic reactions occurs in response to not giving peanut butter during infancy. Therefore, four to six months old babies have a greater tendency to avoid this deadly allergic reaction.
According to current NHS guidance, one can feed their babies crushed peanuts or peanut butter. Even mothers can bake 3 ingredient peanut butter cookies for their young ones. Your young ones can enjoy these tasty bites – giving them plenty of health benefits.
Regarding peanut butter benefits, its spoonful carries Vitamin E, Magnesium, Selenium, Iron, and Vitamin B6.
In the end, best advice for parents is to continue breastfeeding along with giving solid food to their babies.