thread: I learnt something about kids and coughing....

  1. #1
    Registered User
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    Mar 2006
    Penrith/Kingswood/Orchard Hills....
    1,147

    I learnt something about kids and coughing....

    Last night after three sleepless nights of DS#1 coughing, we took him to our GP and apart from needing anti-b's (woops!) I asked her for something to ease his coughing. Put it this way, his coughing was almost continuous at times.

    She said that at his age (4 in Sept) there is a little 'switch' in their brain that has not learnt how to turn off. In adults we can try to and even supress a cough but kids can't! She also said giving cough mixture is a waste of time due to this fact also.

    Interesting.

    DH and I have found though a teaspoon of honey (I nearly wrote coffee then! ) helps suppress the tickle though! Not for long but a little bit of relief for my frayed nerves. lol

    Just wanted to share.

    xxxx

  2. #2
    BellyBelly Member

    Oct 2008
    3,132

    I read somewhere that giving them nurofen relaxes the muscles in their throat and stops their coughing. I have been giving my kids a dose of nurofen before bed if they have ever had a bad cough and it works (or it has for us). It was especially useful after we all had swine flu because we had a cough for a few weeks - it wasn't a secondary infection just a cough that took a long time to go.

  3. #3
    Registered User
    Add Rach75 on Facebook

    Oct 2005
    Moura, QLD, Australia
    3,754

    you can buy a homapathic tablet like the teething tablets for coughs it works helps to relax their muscles

  4. #4
    Administrator
    Add Rouge on Facebook

    Jun 2003
    Ubiquity
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    Another thing is (just so other parents know) that Asthma becomes apparent in most children around the age of 4 and sometimes it's only seen as a cough that won't go away until they have their first attack, so it's always good to check for that too. It's how both mine became diagnosed, with DD though she had a full blown attack and ended up in hospital. With DS we knew what to look for and luckily have been able to manage his attacks at home.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Glenroy
    1,458

    letting them sip warm water also helps

  6. #6
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    Mar 2006
    Penrith/Kingswood/Orchard Hills....
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    Another thing is (just so other parents know) that Asthma becomes apparent in most children around the age of 4 and sometimes it's only seen as a cough that won't go away until they have their first attack, so it's always good to check for that too. It's how both mine became diagnosed, with DD though she had a full blown attack and ended up in hospital. With DS we knew what to look for and luckily have been able to manage his attacks at home.
    Very true. This son of mine also gets quite wheezy during winter and is our croup-child! However this time he wasn't croupy or wheezy just a throat infection....which I can feel starting in my throat too this arvo. *sigh* croup scares the crappola outta me, spesh having called an ambulance last winter for him when he collapsed.


    Winter eh?

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Dec 2009
    605

    Just want to say that your nearly writing coffee instead of honey made me giggle!