Toddler health
By Mayo Clinic StaffFor a toddler, every day is a new adventure — and constant motion is often the name of the game. That's why child safety is a prime toddler health concern. Take simple precautions to prevent falls, burns and other household mishaps.
For many parents, a toddler's limited vocabulary can lead to other toddler health concerns — such as temper tantrums. Learn why tantrums happen, and what you can do to encourage good behavior.
Toddler health is also marked by important milestones, such as potty training. Know when it's time to begin potty training — and, if your child resists, when it's time to temporarily call it quits.
As always, your child's doctor is a great resource for questions about toddler health. Understand what to expect from your toddler, and which toddler health concerns deserve special attention.
July 20, 2016Products and Services
- Book: Mayo Clinic Guide to Your Baby’s First Year
See also
- Acetaminophen and children: Why dose matters
- Air travel with infant
- Bathing your newborn
- Baby Einstein videos
- Baby fat
- Baby naps
- Baby poop: What's normal?
- Baby sign language
- Baby sleep
- Baby sling
- Baby sunscreen
- Baby walkers
- Baby's head shape: What's normal?
- Breast-feeding and medications
- Signs of successful breast-feeding
- Breast-feeding nutrition: Tips for moms
- Breast-feeding support
- Breast-feeding twins
- Breast-feeding vs. formula-feeding
- Breast milk storage
- Choosing a breast pump
- Breast-feeding and alcohol
- Breast-feeding: Pumping tips
- Breast-feeding and weight loss
- Breast-feeding strike
- Breast-feeding tips
- Burn safety
- Car seat safety
- Car sickness in children
- Child development
- Childhood vaccines
- Limiting screen time
- Cold medicines for kids
- Corn syrup for constipation: OK for babies?
- Crying baby? How to keep your cool
- Crying baby
- Discolored baby teeth
- Ear infection treatment: Do alternative therapies work?
- Enterovirus D68: How can I protect my child?
- Extended breast-feeding
- Fall safety for kids
- Newborn feeding basics
- Fitness ideas for the entire family
- Flu shots for kids
- Fruit juice for kids
- Hand-washing tips
- Head lice prevention
- Hygiene hypothesis
- Induced lactation
- Infant botulism
- Infant choking prevention
- Infant constipation
- Infant development: Birth to 3 months
- Infant development: Milestones from 10 to 12 months
- Infant development: Ages 4 to 6 months
- Infant development: Ages 7 to 9 months
- Infant formula preparation
- Infant formula: Is tap or bottled water better?
- Infant formula basics
- Infant growth rates
- Infant massage
- Infant swimming and asthma
- Iron deficiency in children
- Children's swimming
- Language development
- Preventing lead exposure
- Low milk supply
- Returning to work after maternity leave
- New dad tips
- Sleep tips for new parents
- Introducing a new sibling
- Newborn care: 10 tips
- Newborn feedings
- Organic baby food
- Pacifiers and your baby
- Toddler parenting tips
- Poinsettia plants
- Potty training
- Caring for a premature baby
- Sagging breasts after breast-feeding
- Sex education: Talking to toddlers and preschoolers about sex
- Shopping for Kids Shoes
- Sick baby?
- Single-parenting tips
- Baby baths
- Birthmarks
- Breast-feeding positions
- Baby rashes
- How to swaddle a baby
- What a newborn really looks like
- Babies and solid foods
- Spitting up in babies
- Starting solids
- Stroller safety
- Teething
- Temper tantrums
- Terrible twos
- Thermometer basics
- Thermometers: Understand the options
- Toddler speech development
- Tummy time
- Umbilical cord care: Do's and don'ts for parents
- Uncircumcised penis care
- Vaccination schedule
- Childhood vaccines
- Baby's soft spots
- Vital Vaccinations
- Vitamin D for babies
- Water safety
- Weaning tips
- Well-baby exam
- What's causing my infant's diarrhea?
- Wheezing in children
- When to Take Your Child to the E.D.