The three things that worry parents most about their children: What if the baby doesn’t eat properly? What if my child has problems with bowel movements? What if my child doesn’t grow tall enough? What if your baby doesn’t eat properly? Picky eaters and anorexics are not uncommon among children. Parents are often worried that not having enough food intake and unbalanced nutrition will be detrimental to their child’s growth and health, so they are very anxious and treat their child’s eating problem as a top priority every day. When faced with a picky eater, parents need to relax, if your child is healthy, active, active, growth and development are in the normal range, there is no need to worry too much about your child’s picky eating problem. Even if your child is a picky eater now, he or she will slowly lose the bad habit of picky eating as he or she grows older. All methods are not as good as patience, and your patience will make life easier for both you and your child. Is your child having problems with bowel movements? Constipation is very common in children, with an incidence of about 0.7%. Constipation often occurs in children who do not eat a high fiber diet, consume low amounts of fluids or do not get enough exercise. The exact cause of constipation in many children is not clear. Constipation often causes painful or incomplete bowel movements, and children often hold back when it is painful to relieve themselves, which can lead to increasing constipation. Although constipation can also cause a decrease in appetite and physical activity when it is severe, about 90% of constipation in childhood is functional, and children can form good bowel habits by adjusting the family diet, developing behavioral habits or with the help of some medication. There are some children who usually eat and sleep well, and are quite active, and their parents take very good care of their children’s diet and living. However, every physical examination always says that the child’s height does not meet the standard. Parents may worry about their children’s future height. Often, there is a difference between a child’s height not meeting the height standards (height below the average for children of the same age) and what doctors call a child who is short (height 2 standard deviations below the same age). However, most of our children’s height growth is in the normal range. Parents do not have to worry too much, they just need to make a good observation record at home, through which they can find out the problems of their children in time, and your accurate record will be very useful for the doctor’s diagnosis and treatment.