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Set a Place for Your
Teen at the Dinner Table
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Family meals are more than just a chance to catch up on the
latest household events.
They may also help adolescents
develop healthy eating habits, says a University of Minnesota
study in a recent issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic
Association.
Researchers found that children
aged 11 to 18 who joined their families for meals ate more fruits,
vegetables, grains and nutrient-dense foods than adolescents who
ate separately from their families.
The study also found that teens
who sat down to at least seven family meals a week ate fewer snack
foods than teens who took part in fewer family meals.
Boys ate more family meals than
girls, and middle school kids ate more family meals than high
school students.
Asian-American families, families
whose mothers didn't work and families with higher socioeconomic
status also ate more meals together, the study found.
The researchers say the finding
suggests dieteticians dealing with adolescents and their families
need to find ways to increase the number of family meals.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about many different areas of teen
health.
Reference
Source 101
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