eczema

Food Is Not The Root Cause of Your Little One's Eczema

Food Is Not The Root Cause of Your Little One's Eczema! Bold statement? Read on!

Is your little one on an elimination diet for her eczema, beyond common triggers like gluten, dairy and eggs? Or maybe she’s on a “healthy” diet that removes whole real foods, food groups, and categories of foods?

Diet culture promises health and healing if we restrict the fuel our bodies need to grow, develop, repair, function, and thrive. This culture is so pervasive it’s even promoted by our healthcare system.

Let me ask you this, has your elimination diet or “healthy” diet solved the problem? If you’re reading this I’m guessing it hasn’t.

Here’s why. Your body runs off nutrients from foods you eat. When they are missing, imbalances develop and symptoms and health problems follow (healthy skin for example needs a lot of different nutrients that come from diet). This can be even worse in children because they are growing and developing at a quick pace and need nourishment. Diet restrictions in children also set them up for an unhealthy relationship with food in the future (fear of food, disordered eating habits and eating disorders).

Every process in the body works using nutrients, which come from foods we eat. Those nutrients are the fuel for our engines.

Your car won’t go anywhere without the right fuel… how can the body?

We are led to believe it can and this is simply not the case.

Food is not the root cause of your little one’s eczema! If you’ve removed common trigger foods and it didn’t help, and her diet is getting smaller and smaller, we’ve got to dig deeper.

We need to nourish her body and stop restricting the fuel it needs to grow, develop, repair and function so she can thrive.

We need to identify reasons she’s not getting that nourishment, there are 3 common ones:

  1. They are not being included in her diet (elimination diets and “healthy” diets can be to blame).

  2. Gut problems are preventing the digestion and absorption of nutrients from foods she does eat.

  3. Chronic stress (yes little ones have it too) burns through nutrients and steals them from other processes in the body, like building and repairing healthy skin.

Together we can identify, and address root causes like these, and restore your little one’s health!

Tips for Picky Eaters [With Eczema]

I’m Jennifer clinical nutritionist, anti diet advocate specializing in childhood eczema and gut problems.

There are 3 common food triggers in eczema, gluten, dairy and eggs. There are many other possible ones, but this is where we start.

If you or your child struggles with eczema and consumes a lot of these foods, a short term elimination diet may help determine if they are triggering your symptoms. 

Start with gluten, it’s often the most problematic. In kids, we want to wean them from gluten, because going cold turkey can cause withdrawal symptoms. If removing gluten doesn’t help, try dairy, and then third eggs. 

Next steps are not more food removals, if taking these 3 out doesn’t help, work with a professional and explore gut health.

Is your child a picky eater? Let’s go over some ways to help your picky eater expand his palate.

It can take multiple introductions of a single food before a taste is developed for it.

It can take 10, 20, 100, or even more tries of a food before it’s accepted. Don’t give up on adding healthy foods just because it didn’t work the first, second, or tenth time.

Baby develops his taste patterns by 9 months old, so you’ve only got a few month to prevent picky eating habits! First solid food introductions (around 6 months old) don’t need to be baby cereals. Think puréed vegetables, fruit and finely chopped meats for protein (well-cooked too, to avoid a choking hazard). Mashed ripe banana, avocado and sweet potato are all nutritious options.

Why is overcoming picky eating important?

Your body runs off of nutrients from foods you eat, when nutrients are missing imbalances develop and symptoms and health problems follow.

Healthy skin for example requires a wide range of nutrients from all food groups and categories of foods. One of the first things I explore with children who have eczema is making sure their diet is rich in these nutrients. We often have to dig deeper to find the root cause, but we always look at nutrition first and this may surprise you, but it’s not about taking more foods out. In fact adding foods back in can help significantly. 

Tips For Picky Eaters

 

  1. Keep offering the food to your picky eater. He doesn’t have to eat it. Simply exposing your him to it is an important part of the process. It is ok for him to pick up the food, play with it and feel it. This helps him get used to it.

  2. Offer soft foods cut up in small pieces, and cut them smaller than you think may be necessary, avoiding anything that might be a choking hazard.

  3. Give your child a spoon and let him feed himself. Giving him control of the situation may encourage him to eat a few bites.

  4. Wait to offer a new food until your picky eater is truly hungry. If he’s just eaten or snacked, there won’t be much motivation to try something new.

  5. Prepare meals with your picky eater as your co-chef! Give him a few bites of a new food while you are preparing it so he can get familiar with it.

  6. Take your picky eater to a store that gives out samples like Whole Foods or Costco, and you might be surprised at what he’ll try!

  7. Children are very impressionable and are great imitators. They will be more likely to want what you are eating, and to avoid foods you show disgust or lack of interest in when trying.

  8. If you give them healthy foods, they will eat, and learn to enjoy them.

  9. Having separate menus for different family members encourages habits we don’t want, and it’s too much unnecessary work! If your child has celiac disease and can’t eat gluten, to support him the whole family also should follow the same plan (there are lots of naturally gluten free grain options to choose from that aren’t processed gluten free products).

  10. Some children are sensitive to the taste, smell, or texture of different foods. Experiment with different tastes, smells, and textures and if you think your picky eater may have a sensitivity, talking to a professional can help to rule out medical issues that make it hard to swallow or digest certain foods.

What To Avoid

  1. Forcing your picky eater to eat, this may make the behavior worse, and leads to an unhealthy relationship with food.

  2. Nagging your picky eater, trying to make a deal with him to have just a bite or two, or that he can have dessert if he eats his vegetables teaches him that there is a reward attached to everything (and this certainly isn’t the case in life).

Be patient, be persistent, take small steps in the right direction, and you can get your picky eater to come around.