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Children who consume peanut products as infants until age 5 were 71% less likely to have a peanut allergy at age 13, study finds.
A new NIH study found that giving infants small amounts of peanut products from infancy to age 5 may reduce the risk of peanut allergies by as much as 71%.
In today’s Health Alert, many parents avoid giving infants and young children peanut products for fear of a serious allergic reaction, but new research suggests this actually might help prevent ...
3 things to know as new study emphasizes need to give kids peanut butter at a young age A new study says early exposure reduces peanut allergy risk later on by 71%.
Introducing peanut-containing foods to infants can dramatically reduce the risk of peanut allergies later in childhood.
For nearly a decade, national guidelines have recommended introducing safe forms of peanut-containing foods to infants to ...
Babies who are exposed to peanuts early in life are less likely to develop allergies to them, a new study said. Giving peanuts to infants as young as 4 months old reduced the risk of them having ...
Giving peanut products to children under 5 from infancy may lower the risk of developing a peanut allergy later in life, according to an NIH study.
So it's only natural that parents are weary when giving their babies peanuts or peanut butter for the first time. But, as a new study found, giving infants small amounts of peanut products may ...
A new study, however, has discovered a way to possibly reduce an infant’s risk of developing it. Peanut allergy is the most common cause of food-induced anaphylaxis, according to the Mayo Clinic.
(NEW YORK) — A new study is shedding more light on the importance of exposing kids to peanut products at a young age to help reduce the risk of an allergy later in life.