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Should Women With Lumpy Breasts Get Mammograms Earlier?

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Getty Images

If I have lumpy breasts, should I start getting mammograms at an earlier age?

Nope, not necessarily. Women with lumpy breasts don’t
have a higher risk of breast cancer, so there’s no reason 
to suggest earlier screening. The technical term for lumpy breasts is “fibrocystic breasts,” and the lumps are nodules of fibrous tissue or cysts that form in response to fluctuating hormones. These lumps, which more than 50 percent of women have, may feel tender, and they tend to change in size throughout your menstrual cycle.

If you have fibrocystic breasts, be sure to perform monthly self-exams and keep track of how your breasts normally feel so you don’t miss something that may actually be cancer. Anything that doesn’t feel right—like a new lump that sticks around or a thickening 
or new firmness in an existing lump—should be investigated by your doctor right away.

Otherwise, when to start screening is a big decision
 (and a hot-button issue). The latest guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force say that the decision to begin routine screening before age 50 (for women not at high risk) is one that women should make for themselves, in discussion with their doctor, by weighing their family history, tolerance for risk and other factors. But many organizations, including The American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, say
that every woman should get an annual or biannual mammogram beginning at age 40. Personally, I advise patients to look closely at their specific health history with their doctors and begin screening when it makes sense for them.

Health‘s medical editor, Roshini Rajapaksa, MD, is assistant professor of medicine at the NYU School of Medicine and co-founder of Tula Skincare.

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3 Reasons to LOVE Chipotle From an RD

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

Well, it’s official. Business analysts, health enthusiasts, and many health experts have declared Chipotle as the No. 1 healthy fast food go-to (a spot formerly held by Subway).

As a long-time fan of Chipotle, I recommend the chain to my clients, from professional athletes to new moms trying to shed the baby weight. I consider Chipotle more healthy food fast rather than fast food. Here are three fundamental reasons why.

Ingredients are everything

The ingredients in Chipotle’s chicken are simple: Chicken, water, chipotle chile, rice bran oil, cumin, garlic, oregano, black pepper, kosher salt.

I’m tempted to say enough said here, but to drive the point home, Chipotle’s chicken recipe is much, much closer to something you can make it home versus something that’s made in a factory.

As more and more consumers adopt a clean eating philosophy, the trend is toward recognizable ingredients in food, which I think is a great thing. In my opinion, we don’t know enough about the health effects of the additives commonly used in many processed and fast foods, so I always advise my clients to stick with ingredients they recognize.

The fact that Chipotle has always been so transparent about its ingredients, has made changes in response to consumer demand, and keeps them as simple as possible earns a lot of points in my book.

RELATED: 4 Healthy Meals for Under $10

Quality over calories

News reports of Chipotle’s boom often point out that the average order packs over 1,000 calories, more than half the amount most adults need daily. True.

But slashing that number is incredibly easy thanks to the basic “goodness” of Chipotle’s ingredients and menu items. Plus, they even offer you a handy online nutrition calculator  to help you to see how tweaking what you ask for when you move down the line affects well, your bottom line.

For example, simply switching from a burrito to a burrito bowl, by ditching the flour tortilla, instantly saves 300 calories, including 46 grams of carbohydrate. If you order a bowl and skip both the cheese and sour cream you save another 215 calories.

RELATED: 12 Mouthwatering Meatless Meals

My personal standard order is a salad, no dressing, made with romaine lettuce, black beans, fajita veggies, fresh tomato salsa, and guacamole (the salsa and guac are dressing enough). It clocks in at 400 calories, and provides a nutrient-rich balance of veggies, lean protein, healthy and satisfying plant-based fat, and a whopping 21 grams of dietary fiber, about 85% of the minimum recommended daily target.

Chipotle’s menu offers a wide range of calorie levels and raises the bar on quality. I firmly believe that 400 calories worth of “real food” ingredients is far healthier for your metabolism and waistline than an identical number of calories (or even less) of highly processed and/or fried food that is much lower in vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and fiber. Case in point: one recent study from Pomona College found that volunteers who ate processed food burned about 50% fewer calories than those who consumed the same number of calories from whole foods.

Focusing on sustainability

A few of Chipotle’s recent moves have generated a great deal of media buzz. The first involved ceasing the sale of carnitas, due to the inability to find a supplier who meets their standards for raising pigs humanely. (It’s now back.) Many consumers, including those who love eating pork, were impressed by Chipotle’s decision not to compromise its principles, even if it meant losing sales. Chipotle has also committed to serving meats raised without the use of hormones or antibiotics.

Then there was Chipotle’s (admittedly controversial) decision to completely eliminate GMO ingredients, making them the first national chain to do so. GMOs, or “genetically modified organisms,” are plants or animals created through biotechnology gene-splicing techniques.

As a Registered Dietitian with graduate degrees in both nutrition science and public health, I believe that the impact of food production on the environment is a critical piece of the wellness puzzle. The use of antibiotics in livestock has been shown to directly impact things like the rise in antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and pesticide exposure has been linked to rates of obesity and diseases like type 2 diabetes.

Chipotle has shown that a commitment to ingredients that support food sustainability—the ability to safely grow healthy food into the future—is not only possible for a fast food restaurant, but it also helps foster a sense of trust with consumers who can feel better about their eating choices.

The fact that all of this is resonating with the public is a sign that our attitudes about food are changing, including how we define healthy, and it will be interesting to see if this turns into a sea change among the fast food industry. My hope is that it does, and that in turn, will lead to real, long-term health benefits for Americans.

RELATED: 13 Healthy Frozen Dinners




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Dementia Meds May Lead to Harmful Weight Loss: Study

MONDAY, Aug. 3, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A class of drugs widely used to treat dementia — called cholinesterase inhibitors — could cause harmful weight loss in some patients, a new study suggests.

These medications include Aricept (donepezil), Razadyne (galantamine) and Exelon (rivastigmine).

“Our study provides evidence in a large, real-world population that cholinesterase inhibitors may contribute to clinically significant weight loss in a substantial proportion of older adults with dementia,” study lead author Dr. Meera Sheffrin, a geriatrics fellow in the School of Medicine, at the University of California, San Francisco, said in a university news release.

One expert said the findings point out a common problem for Alzheimer’s patients.

“Weight loss is a concern, not only for patients but also for their overwhelmed caregivers, who keep struggling with multiple challenges, including providing their loved ones with appropriate foods to maintain weight, and deliver quality of care,” said Dr. Giselle Wolf-Klein, director of geriatric education at North Shore-LIJ Health System in New Hyde Park, N.Y.

For the study, Sheffrin’s team reviewed VA data from 2007 to 2010 on nearly 3,500 people diagnosed with dementia. The investigators assessed weight loss for people taking newly prescribed cholinesterase inhibitors versus weight loss experienced by those taking other types of newly prescribed medications.

Cholinesterase inhibitors are known to have side effects such as gastrointestinal symptoms, the study authors noted in the news release.

After one year of treatment, more than 29 percent of patients taking the dementia drugs had a significant weight loss. Meanwhile, 23 percent of those taking other medications had a significant weight loss in the same timeframe. Significant weight loss was defined as losing at least 10 pounds over 12 months, the researchers said.

The findings show that doctors need to consider the risk of harmful weight loss when prescribing these dementia drugs to older adults. Physicians also need to watch for weight loss in patients taking the drugs, the study authors said.

“This is very relevant to patient care because unintentional weight loss in older adults is associated with many adverse outcomes, including increased rates of institutionalization and mortality, a decline in functional status, and poorer quality of life,” Sheffrin said.

But Wolf-Klein said it’s tough to tease out the cause of weight loss in people with Alzheimer’s disease.

“Weight loss in Alzheimer’s disease is a well-known clinical problem, which was described many years before the advent of the new therapies,” Wolf-Klein said. But, on the other hand, the drugs also “have all been associated with gastrointestinal complications, such as weight loss, nausea and vomiting,” she added.

Wolf-Klein also explained that, for now, none of the drugs stops Alzheimer’s disease, they merely slow illness progression. So, when weight loss becomes a concern, “timely discontinuation of cholinesterase inhibitors should be actively considered as demented patients progress in their disease,” she said.

Another expert agreed.

“The results of this study suggest that the harms from these medications may outweigh their benefits, and that a decision to use them should be undertaken only after a detailed discussion between doctors, patients and caregivers,” said Dr. R. Sean Morrison, professor of geriatrics and palliative medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

About one in six people over 80 are affected by Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, the researchers noted.

The study is published in the August issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about dementia.





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Urine Test Might Find Pancreatic Cancer Early, Study Suggests

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Aug. 3, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Scientists report that they have developed a urine test that may detect pancreatic cancer at an early stage.

Usually, symptoms of this deadly disease do not appear until it is at an advanced stage and has spread, and little can be done to save the patient. Researchers have been looking for a way to screen people for pancreatic cancer in the hopes that early detection might lead to effective treatment.

“If this test proves to be as good as we hope, we could make an important difference and enable early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer completely noninvasively, using urine samples,” said lead researcher Dr. Tatjana Crnogorac-Jurcevic, a reader in cancer genomics at the Centre for Molecular Oncology at Barts Cancer Institute of Queen Mary University of London.

The team found three indicators (“markers”) that, when combined, signal the beginnings of pancreatic cancer.

“This is important since if this cancer is detected early, patients can undergo surgery, which greatly increases the survival,” she said. “At present, patients are diagnosed with cancer that has already spread and survival is typically three to six months.”

The report was published Aug. 3 in the journal Clinical Cancer Research.

For the study, funded by the Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund, a British charity, researchers analyzed 488 urine samples, including 192 from patients with pancreatic cancer, 92 from patients with chronic pancreatitis and 87 from healthy people. In addition, they looked at 117 urine samples from patients with diseases of the liver and gall bladder. These samples were used to confirm their findings.

Of the 1,500 proteins found in the urine samples, Crnogorac-Jurcevic’s team focused on three: LYVE1, REG1A and TFF1.

The researchers found that patients with pancreatic cancer had elevated levels of all three proteins compared with healthy patients and patients with pancreatitis. Using all three proteins, they were able to detect early stage pancreatic cancer more than 90 percent of the time, they reported.

Although the cause of pancreatic cancer isn’t known, those at risk include people with a family history of the disease, heavy smokers, people who are obese and those over 50 with newly diagnosed diabetes, the researchers said.

The team is hoping to do further tests on urine samples from people at high risk to further validate their findings.

Dr. Leonard Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer at the American Cancer Society, said the findings are very preliminary and more research is needed to see if a screening test could be developed based on these three markers.

Among Lichtenfeld’s concerns for any screening test are accuracy, ease and repeatability to find cancer early. “Ultimately, one has to demonstrate that the test really makes a difference in outcomes,” he said.

“I think it’s premature to make a claim that this is an effective screening test,” he said. “This is not something that is going to be available in the near future.”

More information

Visit the American Cancer Society for more on pancreatic cancer.





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FDA Approves New Rosacea Treatment

MONDAY, Aug. 3, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A new prescription treatment for the common skin condition rosacea was approved on Monday by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Rosacea is a chronic disease that causes redness and pimples on the skin. In most cases, it affects only the face. Rosacea is most common in women and people with fair complexions, according to the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

The FDA approved Bayer HealthCare’s Finacea (azelaic acid) Foam, 15 percent, for treatment of mild to moderate rosacea, Bayer said in a news release.

“According to recent studies, Finacea Foam can help with papules [pimples], pustules [pus-filled bumps] and redness of rosacea,” said Dr. Gary Goldenberg, an assistant clinical professor of dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, in New York City. “This is good news for patients with this chronic condition.”

The approval is based on the results of two 12-week clinical trials that included more than 1,300 people, aged 19 to 92. The most common side effects of the foam, which is applied to the skin, were localized pain (6.2 percent of patients), itching (2.5 percent), dryness (0.7 percent) and redness of the skin (0.7 percent).

Finacea Foam will be available by prescription only beginning in September, according to Bayer.

There have been a few reports of white spots on the skin after the use of azelaic acid, and doctors should monitor patients with dark complexions for early signs of this problem, Bayer said.

The company also cautioned that azelaic acid can irritate the eyes, and that Finacea Foam should not come into contact with the eyes, mouth or other mucous membranes.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about rosacea.





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Users of Jessica Alba’s Honest Company Sunscreen Are Posting Photos of Epic Sunburns

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Eco-friendly Honest Company’s sunscreen may be “naturally derived,” “unscented” and “non-toxic,” according to the company’swebsite, but now some users on social media are claiming that it doesn’t work.

The sunscreen, promoted by sometime-movie-star Jessica Alba’s wildly successful baby product company as “providing the best broad spectrum protection for your family,” is getting bad reviews by users online, many of whom are posting painful-looking sunburn photos they say they took after using the product.

In a statement to the Today Show, the Honest Company stressed that the sunscreen is tested by an independent third party with positive results and that “the number of complaints received on our own website about our Sunscreen Lotion constitute less than one half of one percent of all units actually sold at Honest.com. We stand behind the safety and efficacy of this product.”

A country-wide investigation by NBC5 in Chicago found that the sunscreen’s formula was changed at some point, reducing to 9.3% non-nano zinc oxide from 20%. (The majority of zinc oxide sunscreens list their active ingredients at 18 to 25%). Still, the company says it added other components to make up for the difference in zinc.

“The Honest Company has been transparent about the amount of zinc since the new formula came out in early 2015 as seen on the website and the new formula’s packaging,” the company told Today.

This article originally appeared on Time.com.




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Head Injury Tied to Long-Term Attention Issues in Kids

By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Aug. 3, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Children who suffer even mild brain injuries may experience momentary lapses in attention long after their accident, new research finds.

The study of 6- to 13-year-olds found these attention lapses led to lower behavior and intelligence ratings by their parents and teachers.

“Parents, teachers and doctors should be aware that attention impairment after traumatic brain injury can manifest as very short lapses in focus, causing children to be slower,” said study researcher Marsh Konigs, a doctoral candidate at VU University Amsterdam in the Netherlands.

This loss of focus was apparent even when scans showed no obvious brain damage, the researchers said.

Traumatic brain injury can occur from a blow to the head caused by a fall, traffic accident, assault or sports injury. Concussion is one type of traumatic brain injury. In 2009, more than 248,000 teens and children were treated in U.S. emergency rooms for sports- and recreation-related traumatic brain injuries or concussions, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For the study, published online Aug. 3 in the journal Pediatrics, researchers compared 113 children who had been hospitalized with a traumatic brain injury with 53 children who had a trauma injury not involving the head. The injuries, which ranged from mild to severe, occurred more than 18 months earlier on average.

The researchers tested mental functioning and evaluated questionnaires completed by parents and teachers at least two months after the injuries.

The head-injured group had slower processing speed, the researchers found. And their attention lapses were longer than those noted in the other children. But unlike other research, no differences were reported in other types of attention, such as executive attention — the ability to resolve conflict between competing responses.

The authors note, however, that although the findings suggest an association between head injury and lapses in attention, they do not prove a direct cause-and-effect relationship.

The study did not look at remedies, but Konigs said stimulant medications prescribed for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may also benefit kids with head injuries who have these attention deficiencies.

The take-home message from this study is that even mild head injury can lead to problems, said Dr. Andrew Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York in New Hyde Park, N.Y. He was not involved with the research.

“This study provides further evidence of the importance of trying to minimize brain trauma, since even when there is no visible damage on CAT scans or MRIs, there can still be a significant adverse effect on attention span and behavior,” Adesman said.

This research underscores the need to protect children from head injuries through proper supervision, consistent use of child car seats and seat belts, as well as headgear when bike riding and playing contact sports, he added.

A notable finding is that these effects on attention can be prolonged, said Dr. John Kuluz, a pediatric brain injury specialist at Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami, who was not involved in the study. While some kids recover sufficiently after head trauma, he said, others have attention lapses that can interfere with school work.

Parents and teachers can help by restricting “sensory overload,” Kuluz said. “They can be overloaded with sensory input from video games, texting and other sources.”

If you are limited in your ability to pay attention, he said, “use brain energy for the important things, such as your school work. Don’t spend hours and hours on video games and texting.”

More information

For more about brain injury in children, visit the Brain Injury Association.





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Severe ‘Picky Eating’ May Point to Mental Health Issues in Kids

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Aug. 3, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A kid who is a seriously “picky eater” is also likely to struggle with emotional problems like anxiety and depression, new research suggests.

About 3 percent of kids suffer from severe selective eating, to the extent that they can’t eat out at a restaurant, said lead researcher Nancy Zucker, an eating disorders specialist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C.

These kids are more than twice as likely to be diagnosed with depression or social anxiety, when compared with kids who’ll eat anything, according to findings published online Aug. 3 in the journal Pediatrics.

Even kids who are moderate picky eaters — for example, they only have 10 foods they will reliably eat — are at increased risk for symptoms of anxiety and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, although not to the extent that they can be diagnosed with a disorder, Zucker added.

The researchers discovered that kids who eat selectively are unusually sensitive, and that this sensitivity affects their eating and their emotional health.

“They have a stronger sensitivity to the world outside and to how their body feels,” Zucker said. “That sets them up to have more vivid experiences — more intense food experiences, more intense emotional experiences. None of that is pathological, but it could be a vulnerability for later problems.”

These findings should take some of the blame off of the parents, since it’s not just a matter of controlling an unruly child, Zucker said.

In this study, researchers looked at more than 3,400 children ages 2 to nearly 6 who were treated at one of Duke’s pediatric primary care clinics. Of those, over 900 kids were screened by an in-home evaluation, and their parents filled out psychiatric assessment forms and reported on their eating patterns.

About 20 percent of the kids who were screened had some form of selective eating, researchers found. Of those, 3 percent exhibited signs of severe selective eating and 17 percent were moderately picky eaters.

Children who ate within the normal range of childhood likes and dislikes weren’t considered picky eaters. “Kids who disliked broccoli were considered normal,” Zucker said.

For severe picky eaters, eating out is too challenging, Zucker said.

“Their sensitivities to smell and other foods are so extreme that eating around other people and all the different smells at a restaurant are too overwhelming,” she said.

On the other hand, moderate picky eaters have a limited list of foods they like, but they can manage eating out. “He might not be able to order off the menu, but he’s still fine being around food,” Zucker said.

The researchers found that selective eaters also are hypersensitive to smell, noise, visual cues and oral textures. They are more likely to avoid food and to have problems swallowing.

Dr. Andrew Adesman is chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York in New Hyde Park. He said this study raises important questions about the possibility that “picky eaters may have a different sensory experience of tastes. Further research into variations in sensory experience is warranted.”

Parents of a severely selective eater should seek out professional help for their child, based on these findings, Zucker said. “That child might not be struggling only with eating that’s causing impairment, but also with other psychiatric diagnoses,” she said.

However, there aren’t many kids who fit this category, Zucker and Adesman noted.

Most of the 17 percent of kids who are moderately picky eaters can be expected to grow out of it, although parents should take steps to help manage their kids’ struggle with food, Zucker said.

For example, to ensure that dinnertime remains a pleasant experience, serve foods that are palatable to the picky eater, and introduce new foods at other times of the day, she recommended.

Also, ignore anyone who advises you your kid will eat whatever you serve once they’re hungry enough, she said.

“None of us who are hungry become more adventurous,” Zucker said. “We become more rigid and set in our ways if we are hungry.”

Finally, don’t be alarmed if your kids tend to choose processed foods over healthier options.

“Processed foods are easier to chew, and they’re very predictable in terms of what they taste like,” Zucker said.

More information

For more on picky eaters, visit the U.S. Department of Agriculture.





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Obese Kids a Universal Target for Bullies

SUNDAY, Aug. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — “Being fat” is seen as the most common reason why children are bullied, a new study reveals.

Researchers who surveyed more than 2,800 adults in the United States, Canada, Iceland and Australia said at least 70 percent of respondents believed that weight was a common reason for bullying. A similar number regarded weight-related bullying as a serious or very serious problem.

Weight-related bullying was considered to be more common than bullying for reasons such as race/ethnicity, sexual orientation or religion.

“Given high rates of childhood obesity in these and many other countries, both school-level and policy-level remedies may be needed to address weight-based bullying on a broad level to improve quality of life for youth with obesity,” said study author Rebecca Puhl, deputy director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity at the University of Connecticut.

Schools should raise awareness about, and take more action to reduce, weight-related bullying, according to 75 percent to 87 percent of the adults. About three-quarters of the respondents said governments should strengthen existing anti-bullying laws to include measures to combat weight-related bullying.

At least 60 percent of the adults in the different countries said schools, teachers, parents, health care providers and governments have an important role in preventing weight-related bullying, according to the study published recently in the journal Pediatric Obesity.

“Our study shows that there is substantial public support for these policy measures,” Puhl said in a university news release.

“Our findings echo recent research from the U.S. showing that parents favor strengthening school-based policies and state laws to address weight-based bullying,” she added. “The time may be ripe to implement school-level policy changes to ensure that vulnerable youth are protected.”

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics has more about bullying.





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Add Asthma, Allergy Plans to Your Back-to-School List

SATURDAY, Aug. 1, 2015 (HealthDay News) — If your child has asthma or allergies, make sure his or her teacher, principal and school nurse know about it as part of your back-to-school planning, the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI) recommends.

“More than 10 million kids under age 18 have asthma, and one in four suffer from respiratory allergies,” ACAAI President Dr. James Sublett said in a news release from the organization.

“Many kids with asthma and food allergies don’t have a plan in place at school. An allergy or asthma action plan doesn’t do any good if it’s not shared with the people who can act on it,” he noted.

The first step is to have allergy/asthma control measures at home, such as lowering exposure to triggers and taking prescribed medications. At school, it’s important for teachers to know your child’s asthma and allergy triggers so that they can help the youngster avoid them in the classroom.

Parents should talk to principals and school nurses about how to handle allergy/asthma emergencies. All 50 states have laws that protect students’ rights to carry and use medicines for asthma and severe allergic reactions (anaphylaxis) at school.

Children at risk for life-threatening allergic reactions from certain foods or insect stings should carry epinephrine auto-injectors and have them available for immediate use, the ACAAI said.

Children with asthma and allergies should be able to take part in any school sport as long as they follow their doctor’s advice. Parents should ensure their child’s gym teacher and coaches know what to do in case of an asthma emergency.

Many children with food allergies are able to identify what they can and can’t eat, but it’s helpful if other parents and your child’s friends know, too. Some schools have policies restricting treats for special occasions. If your child’s school does not, be sure to tell other parents and children what types of foods your child must avoid.

More information

The American Lung Association has more about childhood asthma.





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