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It can be hard to help a young child with constipation, sometimes because you aren’t sure that’s what it is. Your baby may be suffering from a variety of symptoms including pain, irritability, sweating and poor appetite. If you think your baby has constipation, you may feel guilty thinking there’s something you could have done to prevent it, or worse still, powerless thinking there is not much you can do.
It’s important to recognise constipation early so it can be treated immediately. According to The Bristol Stool Scale a bowel movement should occur in the form of a soft, easily passable poop at least four times a week.
How to recognise constipation
According to research from Docusol Paediatric, the evidence backed constipation solution from the life sciences healthcare company, Typharm, parents find it hard to know how to recognise and manage symptoms of constipation in their young children. Recognising constipation means looking carefully at your child’s poop. If it’s smooth and soft and shaped like a sausage and your baby is passing it easily at least four times a week, he or she is unlikely to be constipated. If the poop is sausage shaped and looks like corn on the cob or a bunch of grapes or your child is passing hard lumps like rabbit droppings and the poop is difficult to pass, he or she is likely to be constipated.
Your child may cry when trying to poo, have a bloated or painful tummy, a poor appetite, be irritable or angry, or they may want to avoid pooing at all because it’s painful.
How to treat constipation
Prevention