Baby & Toddler : Moving to solid food


Each baby is different and many may be ready for weaning earlier or later: this is just a guide and it worked very well for me. Although this schedule starts from three months, it is important to mention that the first three months of it are really about getting the baby used to different tastes rather then nutrition necessity – it’s a big change from milk to many other foods, and we need to make sure that by six months baby’s taste buds are ready for all the different foods as by then baby probably will be HUNGRY! I also must point out that with my two kids this schedule ran like clockwork – the transition from milk to solids was smooth and easy. The guide refers to breast feeding throughout, but works just as well with a bottle fed baby.

The Baby Weaning Guide

From about 3 months: offer tiny amounts (¼ - ½ teaspoon) of fruit (e.g. peeled pear or grape but it must be sweet) after the 10 am breast feed. It may take a long time for the baby to accept solids - be patient and keep trying! It may help to mix the foods with a little milk to start with.
At approximately 4 months move the fruit to after the supper breast feed and offer pureed veg (e.g. carrot, parsnip, cauliflower, broccoli) after the 10 am breast feed, again keeping the amount very small. Before 6 months, the baby does not need the solids for nourishment, it just needs to get used to the different tastes. Give the vegetables separately so that the baby gets used to the individual tastes.

Other Foods to Offer the Baby

  • Sticks of bread to suck, re-baked in the oven for 5-10 minutes
  • Sticks of celery, cucumber, parsley or raw carrot to suck.
  • Baby rice, potato, stewed and skinned prunes
At approximately 5 months offer the baby solids three times a day, still after the breast feeds.

When the Baby is Six Months

  • For 10 days, give the solids in between the two halves of the breast feed;
  • Gradually move the solid food to before the breast feed, first lunch, then breakfast, then supper at 5-7 day intervals.
Gradually increase the amount given; let the baby’s appetite be the guide!
So by about 7 months all 3 meals can be taken before the milk, for example:
  • 5.30 amMilk
  • 9.30 amBreakfast - pear or prunes, natural yogurt, toast, milk
  • 1.30 pmPotato or rice with other veg, milk
  • 5.30 pmBaby muesli, banana, milk
  • 10.30Milk - gradually reduce amount given
Depending on your nutritional preferences and how long you wish to breast-feed your baby for, organic bottled milk (e.g. cows' or goats' milk) can be offered, diluted 50/50, at six months; at 9 months you can reduce the dilution to 75/25, then at 12 months you can give 100% bottled milk. Both my babies were fully weaned by 9 months, as this is what suited both me and them. May you and your baby enjoy this wonderful process

Infant Sleep Positioners Pose Hazards : Few Tips

Here are a few tips to keep your child safe while sleeping:
  • Make sure that your infants are put to bed on their backs and not on their stomachs.
  • Infants should sleep on a mattress that is hard. Soft bedding can lead to suffocation.
  • Remove any stuffed toys or heavy blankets from the sleep area.
  • Consider using single-piece sleep attire, sometime called an onesie, that would keep the baby warm without any covers or blankets.
  • Clear everything from around the crib. Infants have been strangled on cords from blinds.
  • The slats on cribs should not be far enough apart for the infants to stick their head through.
  • Use thin bumper pads instead of the thick fluffy ones.
  • Instead of asking other mothers or grandmothers for advice, consult your doctor. The times have changed and so has the advice.
  • Be aware that cribs that are bought at garage sales or one that you have stored in the attack might not meet current guidelines of the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
  • Putting infants to bed on their sides is also dangerous; it is very easy for them to roll onto their stomachs.
  • Make sure that caregivers know what you do about putting your infant or baby to bed. Many do not know, even at established day-care centers.
  • Pacifiers are O.K. to use when placing a baby down to sleep, but they should not be left in the crib after they fall asleep.

AVATAR : the most pirated movie of the year


The biggest film in history was downloaded from torrent websites 16.6 million times, according to TorrentFreak. That represents a 33% increase in download activity from last year's top-pirated film, "Star Trek," which was downloaded just under 11 million times.

20th Century Fox, which distributed the sci-fi epic, isn't exactly crying. The film grossed nearly $2.8 billion at the worldwide box office to become the highest-grossing movie ever (before accounting for inflation).


Director James Cameron has frequently touted 3D filmmaking as the industry's best hope for combating piracy, but 3D glasses didn't hold back pirates from shattering all recorded piracy records. The financial performance of "Avatar's" home entertainment revenue isn't known yet, but the initial DVD release broke sales records.


Surprisingly, second on the list was "Kick-Ass," with 11.4 million downloads off torrent web sites. The kiddie superhero film underperformed at the worldwide box office with sales of about $96 million.
"Inception" followed with 9.7 million downloads, "Shutter Island" with 9.5 million, and "Iron Man 2" with 8.8 million.
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Drumroll please ... "Avatar" is the most pirated film of the year, according to data released by a file-sharing blog.

Children should be given flu jab: researchers

Toddlers should be vaccinated against flu, researchers have said, as a new study shows it protects seven in ten children.


Young children are particularly susceptible to flu and other infections and should be routinely vaccinated, researchers said in an article in Lancet Infectious Diseases.
In America and Finland young children have been vaccinated for several years but other countries have not followed due to a lack of data about the effectiveness of the vaccines in this age group.
Research conducted in Finland found the match of the flu strains in the vaccine to those circulating was more important for efficacy than the age of the patient.They found that overall the seasonal flu vaccine, which contains two A strains and a B strain of deactivated flu, was effective at preventing the disease in 66 per cent of cases.
Where the vaccine was well matched to the two A strains, this rose to 84 per cent.
This winter in Britain pregnant women are being offered the seasonal flu jab for the first time alongside the over 65s, those with long-term diseases and frontline healthcare workers.
The seasonal flu jab contains the H1N1 swine flu strain but is not the same vaccine that was produced for last year's pandemic.
The Department of Health began vaccinating healthy children under the age of five during the pandemic but experts have not advised that this age group be offered the seasonal vaccine this year.
This is despite the under twos being one of the groups hardest hit by swine flu during the pandemic and that the H1N1 strain is expected to be widespread again this winter.
Lead author Santtu Heinonen, of the Turku University Hospital in Finland, wrote in the journal: "In conclusion, our findings suggest that trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine is effective against influenza in young children, including those younger than two years, when there is a good antigenic match between the vaccine and the circulating strains.
"Together with ample evidence for the high disease burden of influenza in young children, our findings suggest that influenza vaccine recommendations should be reassessed in most countries."
The study involved comparing the number of laboratory-confirmed influenza A and B infections in 631 prospectively followed children aged 9 to 40 months old who did and did not receive the vaccine.
Overall, the effectiveness of vaccination was 66 per cent against any influenza, and 84 per cent against influenza A viruses.
In children younger than two years overall effectiveness of vaccination was 66 per cent, and 79 per cent against influenza A strains.
They found that in half of the cases of influenza, the children had caught a different B flu strain to the one included in the vaccine that year.
Larger studies, in different countries and involving different vaccines should be conducted they said.
In an accompanying commentary Mark Steinhoff from the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, in Cincinnati, said larger trials were needed 'to assess the cost-effectiveness of a strategy for universal immunisation for influenza in children and the broader effect for such a strategy on families and communities'.
Prof Adam Finn, of Bristol University and consultant in paediatric infectious diseases, said vaccinating young children against seasonal flu might be a way of preventing flu in the wider population as they are known as 'super-spreaders'.
He said: "It is possible that you might save more lives amongst the elderly by vaccinating young children.
"If I were looking to introduce vaccination I would use inactivated flu jabs between six months of age and two years and then other vaccines from two to five years."
Prof Finn added that flu is one of the top three reasons young children are admitted to hospital in the winter.
A Department of Health spokesperson said: “We welcome this study and the information it provides on the effectiveness of flu vaccine in young children. The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation will consider the findings.”

Talking to your children about sex

Sex education shouldn't be a one-off talk but a gradual process of communication, starting when a child is small and continuing until they're adults. If your children grow up knowing it's all right to discuss sex and the feelings they have, then they're much more likely to come to you for support when they need it.
Why is talking about sex important?
Children will learn about sex whether or not you want them to. Children and young people learn about sex from each other and what gets passed on in the playground may not be accurate, or what parents want them to hear.
You have an important role, as their parent, in making sure your child has the right information.

When should I start?

It's best to start talking to your children about sex and growing up at an early age. They will often ask where babies come from when they're very young.
Puberty can start as early as eight for girls and boys may also have wet dreams or erections when they are very young, so it's important that your children are prepared.
Children need this information before they start to experience bodily changes. If they don't have it they may be worried or afraid.
You might feel that by discussing sex you'll encourage your children to start having sex. But research shows that teenagers from families where parents talk frankly about sex wait until they're older before they start having sex, and when they do have sex for the first time they're more likely to use contraceptives.

What if I don't talk to my children about sex?

Not talking about sex can affect how young people feel and behave about sex for the rest of their lives. If you don't talk to your child, they may think that sex is scary or embarrassing.
The UK has the highest rate of teenage pregnancy in Europe and sexually transmitted infections are increasing among young people. Giving your children support, information and help to feel good about themselves can lessen the chances of both.

How can I make it easier?

Many parents feel uncomfortable or embarrassed talking about sex, but there are some ways to make it easier:
  • Start early. You'll find it less awkward if you introduce the topic when your child is very young. Answer questions simply and naturally.
  • Use everyday situations to start conversations. TV programmes are often a good opportunity to talk about relationships, or talk when you're doing something like the washing up. This makes your child feel that sex is a normal part of family life and not a special subject.
  • Have books or leaflets for your child to read, or you to look at together. See below for our list of resources.
  • Have a line up your sleeve for difficult moments, such as: "That's a good question, let's talk about it when we get home." And make sure you do.
  • Ask your child what they think about these issues. This tells you how much they know and helps you give answers they understand.
  • Children notice the tone of what you say as much as what you say. So don't get cross or put them down.
  • If you don't know the answer, say so but find out later.
  • Try to be truthful as stories about storks and gooseberry bushes just confuse children.

Talking to children aged three to four

By this age children are aware and curious about the differences between the sexes and often ask: "Where do babies come from?" and "Can men have babies?"
With young children a simple, short and truthful answer is all that's needed. You can use the excellent books available on the body to help you introduce the subject.
At this age children may touch their genitals. This is a good time to teach children about the difference between private and public behaviour, and also about wanted and unwanted touching.

Talking to children aged five to eight

At these ages children are learning how their bodies work. They are curious about their own and other people's bodies, and about pregnancy and childbirth.
All children need to know that their bodies will be changing. For example, unpacking the shopping which includes a box of tampons, is an ideal time to explain what tampons are.
Some girls start having periods as early as eight years old, so it's best to tell girls about periods by this age.
Boys also need to be told about periods and can feel left out if they're not told. They also need information about how their own bodies will start to develop.

How do I talk to older children?

Older children may not want to admit that they don't know things. If your children say they know all about sex, just ask them what they know and fill in the gaps.
You may have religious or other moral views about sexual responsibility, which you want to introduce to your children at this stage. You need also to explain that being responsible about sexual behaviour means:
  • Considering the needs and feelings of their partner
  • Discussing the relationship both partners want
  • Not having sex if your partner isn't ready
  • Using contraception unless both people want a baby
  • Practising safer sex to avoid sexually transmitted infections

What if they don't want to talk to me?

Teenagers often find it much harder to talk to their parents about sex, so it's important talk to children when they're much younger, rather than leaving it until they feel really awkward.
You may have to accept that your teenager doesn't want to talk to you. Children need privacy and the chance to make their own decisions, but to have your support when they need it.
You can help by making sure that they know where else to get advice if they don't want to discuss these issues with you.

Useful books

There are lots of books available for parents and children about sex. The list below is not exhaustive but includes a number of recommendations from the fpa.
  • For under fives: Mummy Laid an Egg, by Babette Cole, published by Red Fox Picture Books
  • For five years onwards: How Are Babies Made? by Alastair Smith, published by Usborne
  • For nine years onwards: Let’s Talk About Where Babies Come From, by Robie Harris, published by Walker Books (approved by fpa)
  • For 11 years onwards: Let’s Talk About Sex, by Robie Harris, published by Walker Books (approved by fpa)
  • For all ages: Questions Children Ask and How to Answer Them, by Dr Miriam Stoppard
  • From fpa: (for 9+): There's a parents pack available (in the UK) that includes fpa’s range of booklets for young people: 4Boys, 4Girls, 4You, Abortion, Is Everybody Doing it?, Love STIngs, Periods, Pregnancy, Talking to Your Child about Sex.

Vitamin D: why are so many people deficient?

In particular it helps maintain healthy bones due in part to its role in aiding calcium absorption.
It has also been shown to be of particular importance to pregnant women, with sufficient levels cutting the proportion of underweight babies and premature births.
It is fat-soluble, meaning the body can store it.
Despite this, more than half Britain's population is thought to be deficient.
The main problem is that we do not get most of our Vitamin D from our diet; rather our skin manufactures 90 per cent of it with the help of sunlight.
In winter months we are largely covered up, except hands and faces, and in any event the sunlight tends not to be strong enough to trigger the conversion process.
Getting enough Vitamin Dfrom diet alone is difficult, although oily fish (eg mackerel, trout, tuna) is a good source, as is liver, mushrooms and dairy products.
Black and Asian people do not manufacture Vitamin D as readily as white people, as the natural pigment of their skin knocks out much of the UV light needed.
More generally, as people spend more work and leisure time indoors, so their exposure to sunlight and ability to make Vitamin D, falls.
Doctors recommend two to three periods of direct exposure to sunlight per week throughout the summer months. This, they say, is sufficient.

German doctors declare "cure" in HIV patient


German researchers who used a bone marrow transplant to treat a cancer patient with the AIDS virus, have declared him cured of the virus -- a stunning claim in a field where the word "cure" is barely whispered.
The patient, who had both HIV infection and leukemia, received the bone marrow transplant in 2007 from a donor who had a genetic mutation known to give patients a natural immunity to the virus.
Nearly four years after the transplant, the patient is free of the virus and it does not appear to be hiding anywhere in his body, Thomas Schneider of Berlin Charite hospital and colleagues said.
"Our results strongly suggest that cure of HIV has been achieved in this patient," they wrote in the journal Blood.
AIDS researchers have rejected the approach on any kind of scale for patients with HIV. A bone marrow transplant is a last-ditch treatment for cancers such as leukemia.
It requires destruction of a patient's own bone marrow -- itself a harrowing process -- and then a transplant from a donor who has a near-exact blood and immune system type. Months of recovery are needed while the transplant grows and reconstitutes the patient's immune system.
"It's not practical and it can kill people," said Dr. Robert Gallo of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland, who helped discover the human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS.
"It is possibly a cure, that's for sure, you won't know for absolute sure until the person dies and undergoes extreme PCR (genetic) analysis of post-mortem tissue."
The mutation affects a receptor, a cellular doorway, called CCR5, that the AIDS virus uses to get into the cells it infects.
Since the 1990s scientists have known that some people, mostly of Northern European descent, have the mutation and are rarely infected with HIV.
"They are uninfectable, virtually," Gallo said.
Some researchers are working on the idea of gene therapy to treat or try to cure HIV, but the technology is still in experimental stages.
"I don't want to throw cold water on an interesting thing, but that's what it is -- an interesting thing," Gallo said.
Schneider's team has been following the patient, taking samples from his colon, liver, spinal fluid and brain as he developed various conditions that justified the tests. They tested all these samples for evidence of the virus, which can be difficult to detect unless it is actively infecting cells.
All these places are suspected "reservoirs" where HIV can hide out for years, to rebound in patients who stop taking drugs that suppress the infection.This patient appears to have a fully functioning immune system, they found, which appears genetically identical to cells from the donor -- not the patient's own immune cells.
Schneider's team found no evidence of HIV anywhere.
"From these results, it is reasonable to conclude that cure of HIV infection has been achieved in this patient," they wrote.
The AIDS virus infects 33 million people globally and has killed more than 25 million since the pandemic began in the 1980s. Cocktails of strong drugs can suppress the virus, keeping patients healthy and reducing the chance they will infect others, but there is no vaccine.

Probiotics Helpful In Children with Stomach Ailments

The search for remedies for common ailments is an ongoing pharmaceutical imperative. There is money to be made, but recent events—recalls and overdosing—has led to the questioning and wisdom of heading to the medicine chest shelf as soon as the first nose runs or stomachache occurs.

Not everyone wants the latest antibiotic or cold remedy, particularly for their children. Some actively seek out alternative remedies and/or revive external treatments, like the mentholatum ointment and mustard packs that their mothers and grandmothers used. And sometimes, they just head to the kitchen….

There is a wealth of curative remedies in your kitchen, from honey for coughs and chicken soup for a cold, to peppermint or ginger tea for an upset stomach. And now you can add yogurt to that list, at least for certain types of diarrhea or stomach viruses.

Probiotics—live cultures that are a type of “good” bacteria—are added to foods and are helpful in keeping the digestive system on track, as well as boosting your immune system. Yogurt is the most common source of probiotics in our everyday lives, and a recent report in the December issue of Pediatrics stated that through randomized trials, “probiotics were modestly effective in treating healthy children with antibiotic-associated diarrhea or acute viral gastroenteritis.” There was also some benefit shown for children suffering from colic, chronic ulcerative colitis, and irritable bowel syndrome, although more research is needed to confirm these findings.

Study authors wrote, "Probiotics taken early during diarrhea from a viral infection may shorten the illness in otherwise healthy children. And probiotics also may prevent diarrhea in children who are taking antibiotics, which can sometimes cause the condition."

As a non-drug, natural approach, exchanging antibiotics for probiotics seems like it could be a safer option for parents not wanting to give harsh drugs to their young children. The results speak volumes for the complementary—in addition to Western practices instead of alternative medicine being practiced in place of more popular methods—medicine movement.

Increasing coffee intake 'doubles stroke risk

A new study has revealed that drinking more coffee than usual could double your risk of a stroke. 
Experts at Harvard Medical School in Boston found that light coffee drinkers who normally have no more than one a day are twice as likely to suffer a blood clot on the brain if they increase that by an extra cup or two. 

The risk of a potentially fatal stroke was greatest in the hour following consumption. After two hours, the coffee's effects had worn off and the risk of a stroke passed. 

But the danger lies in occasional exposure to relatively higher caffeine levels, the findings said - making light coffee drinkers more susceptible. 

This could be because coffee-lovers who get through several cups a day become ''desensitised'' to the effects of caffeine, such as raised blood pressure, stiffening of the arteries and higher norepinephrine levels, a stress hormone that increases heart rate. 

Researchers examined 400 stroke victims, comparing each one's coffee intake in the hour before their stroke with their usual consumption over the previous year. 

Around one in ten had drunk coffee less than an hour before falling ill. 

"Consumption was linked with a risk of stroke in the subsequent hour twice as high as during the periods where there was no coffee consumption," the Daily Mail quoted the authors as saying. 

They found no such association with caffeinated tea or cola. The risk is mainly confined to those who exceed their normal intake of a cup or so a day. 

The study appears in the journal Neurology .

Insurance : Handle with care

 Choosing the insurance policy best-suited to one's needs and requirements is a difficult task. According to the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA), the life insurance sector in India has grown tremendously since the entry of private life insurers. The market has also seen a lot of changes in products and services. Life insurance policies are long-term contracts, ranging from 10 to 25 years. It is important to choose the right plan to meet your requirements.

Unit-linked policies have several advantages such as flexibility, transparency, simplicity, liquidity and efficiency in fund management. These policies are adaptable to the changing needs of the insured over their lifetime. Unit-linked plans, by their very structure, tend to be more efficient in their charge structure. The high level of disclosures required in these plans is an automatic check against an inefficient charge structure, though in long-term contracts, charges get levelled out over a period of time.

In choosing a policy, it is important to choose the life insurer first. The factors that matter are the promoters, customer service, performance track record and the product portfolio. An understanding of one's own financial needs, taking into account the life stage, risk profile, dependants, disposable income and liabilities will identify the protection and savings needs for the person. The protection should cover all the liabilities and future earning potential of the insured. This will ensure that the dependants' lifestyle is not significantly altered if anything unfortunate were to happen.

Amount of insurance required

The amount of insurance required is a factor of the future earning capacity of the individual along with the assets owned and liabilities owed. Insurance is not static and needs to be reviewed by each person at different stages in life. The amount of insurance required changes with factors like income of the family, assets and liabilities of the family, size of the family, number of dependants in the family, and stage of life of the dependants. The person planning to take up insurance has to do a complete need analysis to arrive at the right type and amount of life insurance cover.

It is also recommended that you review your insurance needs every two years to take into consideration any change in earning capacity, profile of dependents, cost of living, increased liabilities like housing loan, personal loans or increase in disposable income to ensure that the life insurance cover is adequate. The savings portion will be determined by the financial goals of the individual.

As an investment instrument, life insurance enjoys several distinct advantages. There is very little or no risk of capital loss, the long-term nature of the contracts ensures that investment horizons are long-term, thus, leading to efficient funds management. The regular nature of savings and the benefits of compounding ensure a substantial corpus over a period of time.

The differentiating factors are flexibility, transparency and the customisation possibilities that are available in the product. These aspects are crucial so as to ensure that the product adapts to the changing financial needs of the insured. Participatory policies are less flexible and adaptable. Be certain of your milestone requirements and time the purchase of your policy accordingly.

Also, consider buying multiple policies to meet different needs. These policies are restrictive and do not provide the option to rebalance the proportion of life insurance and savings within the policy.