When mothers add more fruits and
vegetables to their plates, their daughters do as well,
new research reports.
Furthermore, moms who ate
diets heavy in fruits and veggies were less likely to pressure
their daughters to eat more, and their daughters were less
likely to become so-called "picky" eaters.
Many parents worry about
picky eating in their children. In this study, girls who
were picky eaters typically ate less fruits and vegetables
than healthy eaters.
However, all girls -- whether
they picked at their food or not -- lacked important nutrients
such as calcium and magnesium, study author Dr. Amy T. Galloway
stated.
Furthermore, picky eaters
also ate less fat and sugar, and were less likely to be
overweight than girls who were not picky eaters.
"Picky eating has both costs
and potential benefits," said Galloway, who is based at
Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina. "Our
findings show that all girls would benefit from consuming
more fruits and vegetables, so it may not be worth it for
parents to single out picky eaters."
During the study, Galloway
and her colleagues interviewed 173 mothers and their 7-year-old
white, non-Hispanic daughters about eating habits, and whether
mothers pressured their girls to eat more. When girls turned
9, the researchers contacted them again and determined if
they were picky eaters, meaning they only ate a few foods,
often refused to eat family meals, and were picky or fussy
about what they ate.
Overall, mothers who ate
more fruits and vegetables had daughters who ate more fruits
and vegetables, Galloway and her team report in the Journal
of the American Dietetic Association.
Girls whose mothers put pressure
on them to eat at age 7 were more likely to be picky eaters
at age 9. Picky eaters ate less fruits and vegetables, and
were at greater risk of not getting enough vitamins E and
C than were non-picky eaters. Picky eaters also ate less
fiber.
However, picky eaters were
less likely to be overweight and were not underweight. All
girls in the study lacked vitamin E, calcium and magnesium,
Galloway said.
"Most of the girls in our
study, regardless of whether they were picky eaters, did
not consume recommended quantities of fruits and vegetables,"
she said. "Our findings indicate that (picky eating) might
not be as big of a problem as we have assumed."
Galloway added that the same
trends may not be present in young boys, because parents
often have different weight expectations for their sons,
which may affect parental pressure to eat and boys' eating
habits.
SOURCE: Journal of the American
Dietetic Association, April 2005.