Does Honey Help Relieve a Cough?

Page 1

Radio

Home

Health News

TV

Shop

Living it

News

Features

Sport

A-Z Library

Local

Children

Your Stories

Science

Environment

Health Myths

Fact Buster Search Health & Wellbeing or try the A-Z Library

Health Topics

help

Keywords

Audio & Video

Subscribe

more Topics

Quizzes & Tools

(16 comments)

Share

Print

Q: Does honey help relieve a cough? A: Yes. Honey can be a safe, natural treatment for temporary relief from coughing. Our expert: Dr Ronald McCoy and Professor Anne Chang Published 08/08/2013

Diet & Recipes Fitness Mind & Mood Sex & Relationships Workplace Health Natural Health Pregnancy & Birth Drugs & Alcohol Health Consumer

ABC Search

Events

Suggest a question Do you have a health myth or question you w ant to discuss w ith others? Email Us

Related Topics Health Consumer

Have your say Do you use honey to relieve a cough? Conditions of Use

Your Health Kids' Health Women's Health Men's Health Over 50s Indigenous Health Rural & Regional Health

For generations, parents have given coughing children a spoonful of honey at bedtime to ease their cough so everyone can get some sleep.

Fact files

Both the World Health Organisation and American Academy of Pediatrics both recommend honey to help calm a cough.

ADHD Allergies Alzheimer's & Dementia Anxiety Disorders Arthritis Cancer Depression Diabetes Heart Disease Infertility Influenza Menopause Osteoporosis Pregnancy more fact files in the a-z library

ISTOCKPHOTO

And w hile most children are more than happy w ith this treatment, is there any evidence to suggest this approach w orks?

Dr Ronald McCoy, from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, says there is some research show ing a spoonful of honey every few hours can reduce irritation in little throats. "The World Health Organisation recommends honey for coughs in developing countries w here there's limited access to medication. So although the evidence isn't strong, it suggests there may be an effect in acute coughs in children," he says. One US study did find honey w as better at reducing a cough's severity, frequency and annoyance w hen compared to either no treatment, or honey-flavoured dextromethorphan (the main ingredient in most over-the-counter cough remedies). In another 2012 study, 300 children w ere assigned to one of four different night-time cough treatments: three w ere different types of honey and the fourth w as a placebo. The researchers found any one of the types of honey w as more effective at treating night-time cough than the placebo treatment. Given that the available research has focused on children, it's unclear w hether honey also helps relieve coughs in adults, says paediatric respiratory and sleep physician, Professor Anne Chang. But as long as someone doesn't have other illnesses w here they should be avoiding honey, such as diabetes, it w on't hurt to try. "An adult w ill require higher doses and increased frequency. I'd encourage using honey in lemon drinks, rather than taking spoonfuls of it," she says.

How honey helps It's not clear exactly how honey eases a cough. The authors of the 2012 study noted honey contains more than 181 different natural substances and suggested its antioxidant and antimicrobial properties (other research has show n some types of honey can stop bacterial infections in w ounds) may explain w hy it helped to relieve the children's coughs. Chang says w hile honey does contain microbial properties, it's probably a combination of elements that make it effective. "In addition to honey coating the throat and triggering the sw allow ing mechanism, its sw eetness likely changes the sensitivity of sensory fibres," she says. "There's an interaction betw een the sensory nerves locally and those in the central nervous system that are involved in the regulation of the mechanism of cough."

Not for babies How ever, McCoy says parents shouldn't give honey to children under 12 months old – w hether they have a cough or not. This is because honey can be a source of botulism spores and "there's the risk of infant botulism, w hich is extremely rare, but the child's immune system w on't be developed enough [to fight it off]," he explains. Instead, he recommends giving babies lots of cuddles, small amounts of fluid regularly, and taking them to the GP if necessary.

Safer than over-the-counter medications But for children over 12 months, honey is actually a safer option than many of the over-the-counter converted by Web2PDFConvert.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.