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Trust Kids To Eat Well
Excerpt By
Amanda Gardner, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Parents, just
learn to trust your kids at the table.
That's the message coming from childhood
nutrition experts. Left to their own devices, children will know
when, what and how much to eat. It's just when adults try to interfere
that problems develop. That message was delivered yesterday at
the American Academy of Pediatrics' national conference in Boston.
"In our culture, restrained eating
has gotten to be so normative. People continually try to eat less
food than they're really hungry for, so they feel constantly deprived
and they're vulnerable to being enticed by certain foods that
they find appealing," says Ellyn Satter, an eating specialist,
family therapist and author of Child of Mine: Feeding with
Love and Good Sense. "It's a pattern of being good and
being bad, restraining and disinhibiting, depriving and then eating
a great deal."
The result: An epidemic of overweight
and obese children -- not to mention adults. According to the
results of the 1999-2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES), some 15 percent of children and adolescents aged
six to 19 are overweight. That's triple what the proportion was
in 1980, says the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
More than 10 percent of children aged 2 to 5 are overweight, up
from 7 percent in 1994.
The idea that children have a sort
of internal clock to regulate eating is fairly well accepted in
nutrition circles. It's also well accepted that grownups are a
kid's worst enemy in the kitchen, the dining room and in restaurants.
"We tend to screw up a kid's
natural clock: We say, 'It's time for lunch. Eat.' We bring Goldfish
crackers to the park just in case the kid gets hungry. If the
kid doesn't eat vegetables one day, we don't serve it to them.
Those are all issues where we screw up the natural clock of things,"
says Cathy Nonas, a registered dietician with the New York Obesity
Research Center in New York City and author of Outwit Your
Weight.
Satter tells of one 6-year-old girl
who had been overweight since she was 18 months old. "It
was all because her mother was trying to restrict her food intake
and the little girl had become food-preoccupied and prone to overeating,"
she explains.
As it turns out, the mother was a
chronic dieter and was passing her fears on to her daughter. Once
the mother overcame her fears around food, she was able to feed
her daughter in a more positive way and the girl shed her preoccupation
with food.
None of this means that caregivers
should just sit back and watch nature take its course. Parents
-- and kids -- have certain responsibilities.
"Feeding demands a division of
responsibility," Satter says. "When the children are
old enough to eat from the family table, parents take the responsibility
for what, when and where children are offered food, and children
take responsibility for how much and whether they eat."
This means providing a full range
of nutritious food including, from time to time, potato chips,
ice cream and pizza. "The structure is that, while we eat
these foods for dessert once in a while, we don't make a steady
diet of them and we don't eat them all the time," Satter
says. "It's not a controlled substance." This way, when
potato chips appear, children can learn to consume in moderation.
Here are some more tips for helping
your kids learn to rely on their inner clock:
- Dedicate one room in the house
for eating and don't eat in front of the television. "People
get used to eating at all different times having nothing to
do with hunger," Nonas says. "They can't self-regulate.
The families have to set themselves up so that the kids can
self-regulate."
- Sit down with your kids and develop
universal policies for all members of the family to abide by.
These rules should be geared for good health, not weight. For
instance, Nonas does not allow anybody in her house to order
pepperoni pizza because not everyone likes it and it's "fat
on top of fat."
- Keep making vegetables even if
your kid doesn't eat them. "They'll come around -- probably
not at your house but at somebody else's," Nonas says.
Even though it's a pain, you can also try separating out different
vegetables on separate plates so kids can mix their own salad.
- Don't badger the child to eat
or restrict his or her food intake. "Once the food is on
the table, it's up to the child to decide what and how much
he or she wants to eat," Satter says.
- Don't send your kids off to school
without breakfast. That leaves them wide open to grab something
less nutritious on their way.
- Provide cut-up fruit along with
cake at birthday parties and serve both at the same time. Nonas
finds the fruit is always gobbled up. "Kids are much more
flexible than we give them credit for," she says.
- At fast-food restaurants, ask
your kids to choose a favorite food and balance it with a salad
-- or go for the medium size instead of the large.
- Give kids separate, smaller bags
of snacks. "If you ask two kids to share a bag of potato
chips, they will probably eat more quickly in fear that the
other is going to get more," Nonas says. "If you give
them their own bag, they will be able to self-regulate better."
- Buy pedometers for the whole
family so you can take walks together. Also, convince your school
to raise money through pedometer sales instead of bake sales.
- The bottom line: "Put a
variety of food on the table, sit down and eat with the kids,
and just have a nice time," Satter advises. "Put the
emphasis on providing rather than restricting."
What To Do
Find out more about obesity in
children from the U.S.
Surgeon General or the American
Academy of Family Physicians. The American
Dietetic Association has tips for making the most of family
mealtime.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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