When introducing solids, parents learn about a host of foods that are initially off-limits, including choking hazards like grapes and hot dogs, hard-to-digest items like cow's milk, and sugar-heavy desserts. But unlike many of the other food restrictions during infancy, potential allergies and choking are not the issue with honey. Find out why babies can't eat honey, and learn when it's safe to introduce the natural sweetener into their diet.
Why Can't Babies Eat Honey?
Honey may contain spores of a bacteria called Clostridium botulinum. This could possibly cause botulism—a serious condition that attacks the body's nerves, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
You Should Know About Botulism
Symptoms of infant botulism can appear hours to days after a baby ingests honey. They include lethargy, constipation, poor appetite, difficulty breathing, trouble swallowing, “floppiness” of the body, and weakened muscle control. Severe cases could lead to dehydration and pneumonia.
Doctors diagnose botulism with a series of tests, and it's often treated in the intensive care unit (ICU). Most infants fully recover.
When Can I Introduce Honey?
The presence of botulinum toxin (which is what causes botulism) doesn't mean your honey supply is contaminated. Indeed, these bacteria are harmless to adults and children over 1. But it can make babies, whose digestive and immune systems are less developed, seriously (and possibly fatally) sick.
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Pediatricians recommend waiting until your baby is at least 12 months before introducing honey. You should even stay away jars that claim to have been pasteurized, since this process still can't reliably remove all the bacteria. Also, avoid foods that contain honey as an ingredient. Honey is often used as a sweetener in cakes and other baked goods, so ask before feeding your baby something that might include honey.
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