|
Infants
Eat Fries, Drink Soft Drinks
Infants are eating fattening foods
such as french fries and drinking soft drinks instead of milk,
which may help explain the growing obesity problem, researchers
said.
A
survey of the eating habits of 3,000 youngsters aged four to 24
months found their diets were surprisingly similar to that of
older children -- heavy on soft drinks, sweet candy, and other
junk foods, and light on vegetables and fruits.
"French fries are the most popular
vegetable eaten by children 19 to 24 months old," researcher Dr.
Kathleen Reidy said at an American Dietetic Association conference.
"Twenty to 25 percent of these kids did not eat a single healthy
vegetable on the day of the survey, and 25 to 30 percent did not
eat a single fruit."
She said her research showed soft
drinks were being placed into the bottles of infants as young
as seven months old, and most toddlers between 19 and 24 months
old consumed sweets "at least once a day."
Reidy said 10 to 15 percent of
preschoolers between the ages of two and five are considered overweight.
The study was conducted in 2002
by Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. of Princeton, New Jersey
and baby food maker Gerber Corp. in conjunction with the Tufts
University School of Medicine. The results are set to be published
in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
The findings demonstrate the need
for parents to be more aware of the types of foods their children
are eating, Reidy said.
"Parents are eating on the run,
they're pressed for time and looking for convenience," Reidy said.
"Everyone's just too busy and has just too much to do, so they're
feeding their young children the same things they're eating.
"The best thing they can do is
change their own diets. Be role models for their children to eat
in a more healthy way," she said.
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|