Pass the peas! How family meals benefit asthmatic kids

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Family eating together.

Gathering round the table for dinner can sometimes be a challenge for the harried modern family, yet a growing body of evidence suggests that sitting down for sustenance and social time can have long-term health benefits—notably including a reduced risk for childhood obesity. And a recent study published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry adds to the list of reasons why shoehorning family meals into schedules crammed with ballet lessons and soccer practice can have benefits beyond fostering family conversation. According to a small study led by Barbara H. Fiese, professor of human and community development at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, for asthmatic children frequent family meals can help reduce separation anxiety and stress, which can exacerbate asthma symptoms.

In this recent study, Fiese and colleagues followed 63 children between the ages of 9–12 with chronic asthma for a period of six weeks. The researchers began with two hypotheses—that separation anxiety influences asthma symptom severity, and that routine family meals can lessen this anxiety by cultivating a sense of support and security, minimizing stress and helping improve lung function. At the study’s onset, children’s mental and physical health were assessed using questionnaires, interviews and spirometry tests. Within a week of the initial lab visit, researchers als filmed a family meal in each child’s home. Throughout the study period, researchers tracked children’s use of asthma medications.

Fiese and colleagues found that supportive family mealtimes did make a difference toward reducing signs of separation anxiety, and that, as a result, asthmatic children’s lung function was improved. The sense of security and comfort reinforced during family meal times can make a big difference for children who suffer from separation anxiety, Fiese says, and because mealtime is a routine part of the day, it offers consistent opportunity to build trust and communication.

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  • lourdesgomez

    I have an 8 year old son, Adolfo, who is asthmatic and who was also recently diagnosed with selective mutism. His selective mutism is supposed to be mainly caused by a separation anxiety. It is interesting to see how this separation anxiety can trigger a physical condition, such as asthma, and an emotional condition, such as selective mutism. In order to treat his asthma he is currently under an homeopathy treatment, and attending to therapy to overcome the selective mutism. The Homeopath Physician pointed out that there’s a consistency between Adolfo’s physical and emotional parts: both are extremely sensitive to outside factors, causing asthma, on the one hand, and selective mutism on the other.

  • brunettebuddha

    Separation anxiety has nothing to do with asthma, or any other physical ailment. A 34 year old adult with asthma from the age of 4 and an IgE level in the 900s, I can assure you that asthma is genetic and can NOT be triggered by anxiety attacks. Asthma is only triggered by things asthmatics are ALLERGIC to, called allergens. That tight feeling in the chest when feeling anxious is not an asthma attack, it is the sensation one feels when the body flies into panic mode, simply constriting the muscles. ASTHMA attacks happen when the lungs fill up with mucus and become inflamed, making breathing akin to breathing through a closed straw, or feeling like an elephant is sitting on one’s chest. This happens when the mast cell makes contact with histamine, and the result is a fit of wheezing, coughing, water and runny eyes, itchy chin, itchy throat, and wanting to scratch one’s face off. Address anxiety as a separate disorder, not a TRIGGER. Any pulmonologist or asthma specialist at specializng hospitals will tell you to address anxiety differently – look for specialists at Denver Jewish, Hopkins, UVA, Cleveland Clinic. Make sure you do your research.

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