It’s never too early to read for your child ||Ask your baby's doctor about vitamin D supplements for the baby, especially if you're breast-feeding ||Reading aloud will help your baby be a better reader when she's older ||Your toddler may be clumsy simply due to her trials to master so many new physical skills at the same time. The more active she is, the more likely she will drop things, run into things, or fall down. ||Massaging infants' arms and hands can significantly reduce their pain from needle sticks ||Dealing with slow learners needs special guidance. Find some simple tips in our articles section. ||2- Breastfeeding your new baby ...Breast milk provides all the nutrients that babies need for the first six months of their life and guards against many illnesses and allergies. Also, breastfeeding can help build a special closeness with your baby. Breastfeeding is one of the best things you can do for your baby. ||Set aside time for your partner and share what's happening in each other's life ||Preservatives, fragrances, harsh soap, rough fabric, sweat, and stress can be potential irritants for babies suffering from eczema ||Excessive warmth and overdressing are as harmful as cold weather. Temperature inside your home should not exceed 23 degrees ||
Healthy Meat Guide

 

Scientists believe that giving even small amounts of red meat to children makes it easier for them to achieve a balanced diet. While it is possible to get all the nutrients you need from a vegetarian diet, the advantage of meat is that it's a much more concentrated source of nutrition. Plant-based diets can be so bulky that under-fives may get full up without receiving enough calories for growth. Meat is an excellent source of high-quality protein, but it also supplies concentrated amounts of iron and zinc.


Here we present a small meat guide to help you make more healthy selections. The fat and calories figures are for raw meat (unless stated).


Beef and Veal

    • Average per 100g: 136 calories, 5.1g fat (beef); 106 calories, 1.7g fat (veal).
    • Beef steaks and joints are low in fat, provided only the lean is eaten.
    • Minced beef can be higher in fat, with half being saturated fat - the type strongly linked with heart disease.
    • Stewing steak is as rich in B vitamins, iron and zinc as fillet.


Lamb

    • Average per 100g: 156 calories, 8.3g fat.
    • Lamb is one of the fattiest meats, with the leanest cuts twice as fatty as their beef equivalent.
    • Lamb is one of the best absorbed sources of iron and a rich supply of zinc.
    • An average serving has more than the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) of vitamin B12, needed for healthy red blood cells.


Liver

    • Average per 100g: 104 calories, 3.4g fat.
    • All liver is rich in vitamin A, which is required for the immune system as well as healthy skin, eyes and mucous passages. Richest is calves' liver, which supplies the RDA of vitamin A in just one teaspoon. One portion supplies virtually all of the daily requirement for iron and Zinc.
    • Chicken livers provide the richest source of folic acid, with nearly five times the RDA in 100g.
    • All types of liver provide enough vitamin B12 in one portion to satisfy the body's requirements for a month.
    • Liver isn't high in fat, but it is high in cholesterol.


Kidney

    • Average per 100g: 91 calories, 2.6g fat.
    • Kidney is an excellent source of B vitamins, iron and zinc, but is much lower in vitamin A.
    • It is one of the few good sources of the antioxidant mineral selenium, credited with protecting against heart disease and cancer.


Meat Products

    • Average per 100g: 367 calories, 32.1g fat (sausages); 265 calories, 20.5g fat (beefburgers).
    • Pies, sausages, bacon and burgers are usually less healthy than lean meat.
    • Most products are high in saturated fat, trans fats and salt - all of which can encourage heart disease.
    • They also contain nitrites, which are essential to prevent food poisoning but can lead to the formation of cancer-promoting substances called nitrosamines in the stomach.

 

Source

DailyMail

 

2356
Home Visit Service

Your Baby checkup

Is my child developing normally?
what are the vaccinations that he should have taken until now?
Generate a report for my baby.
Birthdate *

Track Your Baby Vaccinations

Receive reminders by email for the Vaccination timing
Baby Name *
Email *
Birthdate *

Find Your Baby name

Visit our Clinics

Mohandessin

Address View Map
21 Batal Ahmed Abdel Aziz St, 3rd floor

Telephones

01002195777

01000012400

0233048350

Beverly Hills

Address View Map
Beverly Hills, Building 29 services, behind Super Market Al Mokhtar, floor 1.

Telephones

01000012900

0238576831

El Tagamo3

Address View Map
Elegantry Mall, Unit 221

Telephones
01000012800 01000884592

Al Sheikh Zayed

Address View Map
Al Sheikh Zayed - Entrance 2,Downtown Mall - In-front of Spectra ,First Floor - Clinic 113

Telephones

02- 38514031

01000608597

Please enter your e-mail