|
Dietary Restrictions for Kids Prove
Ineffective, Counterproductive
Excerpt
By Susie L. Morris, ABCNews.com
Parents who forbid their children to eat certain foods might
want to reconsider that strategy.
That's because a new study
finds young girls whose mothers are especially restrictive when
it comes to eating are then most prone to engage in excessive
snacking.
Researchers evaluated the eating habits of 140 girls between
the ages of 5 and 9, along with the eating restrictions imposed
by their mothers. Girls with food-restrictive mothers reported
excessive snacking as compared to their unrestricted counterparts.
Girls already overweight at age 5 and subject to strict eating
rules at home were also found to eat in the absence of hunger
most often, a behavior that the study notes puts them at risk
of long-term obesity.
"The girls whose mothers reported using higher levels of restriction
when their daughters were 5 years old ate more in the absence
of hunger at 7 and 9 years of age than did those whose mothers
used lower levels of restriction," said the authors of the study,
which was published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The study says the data is not necessarily applicable to both
genders or all ethnic groups. But girls are more subject to the
societal pressures to be thin and pretty, the authors suggested.
No Nagging
The ineffectiveness of food restrictions is no surprise to experts.
"They [eating restrictions] induce undue preoccupation with
food," said Dr. David Katz, director of the Yale Prevention Research
Center in Derby, Conn., and author of The Way to Eat: A 6-Step
Path to Lifelong Weight Control.
Such restrictions often promote insatiable cravings for food,
said Marilyn K. Tanner, pediatric dietitian and study coordinator
at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. She
said the phenomenon is not unique to children but can also be
seen in adults.
"When parents attempt to restrict their child's eating, the
emphasis is on the child, who correctly interprets the restrictions
to mean, 'There is something wrong with me,' " said Katz. Restrictions
instill the fear a child won't be able to eat when hungry, which
causes overeating, he added.
Also, food rules undermine a child's self-esteem by creating
a negative body image. "This, in turn, interferes with the relaxed
confidence one needs to exercise good judgment and restraint"
when making healthy food choices, Katz said.
Healthy Choices in a
Culture of Consumption
Katz notes more than one-third of children in the United States
are overweight and the number is growing. Tanner says obesity
among children ages 6 to 12 has doubled since 1980, and tripled
for those 12 to 19 years old. She said the obesity epidemic is
not only common in girls but boys as well.
So what can parents do? Plenty. As the study shows, parents
have a tremendous influence on their kids' eating habits.
To promote healthy food choices, Tanner recommends playing down
the urge to obsess over eating. And make healthy foods readily
available. When preparing a meal, "It's not 'Are you going to
eat your vegetable?' It's, 'Which vegetable would you like?' "
Tanner said.
Tanner also urges parents to focus on variety, balance and moderation,
and to not make a big deal out of mealtime. "Don't reward children
with food," she said.
Mealtimes are not rewards; they are just a function of living.
And she said parents must follow the same practices themselves:
"If you preach it, you've got to live it."
Katz concurred. "Most overweight adults are turning to quick-fix
fad diets. There are unlikely to be healthful and often not even
safe, so they are unwise to share with children. That puts parents
in the position of 'Do as I say, not as I do,' which children
simply cannot respect."
Other experts agree that setting a good example is key. Helping
children to make healthy food choices depends on the availability
of healthy food options and the ability of a parent to make healthy
choices themselves.
Reference
Source 104
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|