What is the BRAT diet?
The BRAT diet is used to treat diarrhea in children who eat
solid foods. Diarrhea in children and babies has many
causes, including illness, infection, and food sensitivity.
Diarrhea may be caused or worsened by what the child eats or
drinks. Changing the diet may help.
BRAT stands for:
- Bananas
- Rice (or other starchy food)
- Applesauce
- Toast
These foods are low in fiber. Other foods like this are
crackers, cooked cereals, and pasta.
In addition to these foods, give babies and children lots of
clear fluids for the first 24 to 72 hours. Give babies under
1 year of age Kao Lectrolyte or Pedialyte. For children
older than 1 year, give water, diluted Kool-Aid or diluted
Gatorade as the main fluids. Fluid is very important
because it is easy for a child with diarrhea to become
dehydrated. Dehydration is very serious in babies and young
children.
As stools become more formed, your child can return to a
normal diet. Slowly begin adding other types of food.
Foods high in fiber such as raw fruits and vegetables,
should be added last.
Call your child's health care provider right away if:
- Your child has not urinated in 8 hours (12 hours for
older children) or has a very dry mouth or no tears.
- There is any blood or mucous in the diarrhea.
- Diarrhea is severe or lasts longer than 3 days.
- Your child throws up repeatedly, has a fever that lasts
more than 3 days, or starts acting very sick.
Contact your child's provider if diarrhea starts within 1
week of a trip outside of the US or after a camping trip.
The diarrhea may be due to bacteria or parasites and may
need to be treated with medicine.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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