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Home  >  Living Right  >  Articles  >  Kid's Nutrition - Part I

School's Out, but Nutrition is Not

June, 2001

School is out, and you're now facing the prospect of having your kids home, for three meals a day plus snacks. Whether you work or stay at home full-time, you know feeding is going to be a struggle, particularly since summer beckons kids to devour ice cream by the ton. Fourth-of-July barbecues, outdoor birthday parties, and family vacations pose additional challenges. Do you let them eat whatever they want, or do you risk being the food police? Unfortunately, you can't afford not to take a stand at mealtimes.

Not too long ago, children in industrial countries such as the United States suffered from national epidemics of polio and German measles. Now, the epidemic is obesity. American children are the most disturbing part of the nation's increasing obesity. According to WebMD's medical library, 55% of American adults are overweight, and the obesity problem is spreading to Westernized countries. The obesity trend will most likely continue, since 10% of US children and 12% of adolescents, including those who come from second and third-generation immigrant families, are overweight. A child who is overweight at 14 or 15 will be 17 times more likely to be overweight as an adult than the 78% of the nation's children who are of average weight.

Experts agree that childhood obesity is due in part to decreased physical activity and the increasing popularity of computers, video games and electronic devices that invite children to sit for hours while consuming soda, potato chips and a vast array of snack foods targeted to them. They are also being encouraged to skip breakfast because of busier schedules and, in many cases, economic conditions--they simply can't afford to eat breakfast. Plus, they learn quickly to model their parents' health habits. Also, new research suggests that even if a parent imposes a well-balanced diet at home, making a child feel guilty about snacking may actually increase the temptation to snack on sugary foods. Healthy food becomes the enemy.

In our culture of abundance, we've trained our kids to reject whatever they don't want to eat because we're (a) pressed for time and (b) tired of fighting the dinner war. Or we forbid anything that you might find in a vending machine, then feel guilty because we want that Snickers bar too. We're afraid of serving vegetables, so we cook corn and potatoes, and congratulate ourselves that at least maybe the kids will eat without fuss. And we ignore the whole range of the produce section, 90% of which will most likely end up in the trash. The USDA estimates that 27 percent of America's food goes to waste. This is a disservice not only to the 12 million Americans who suffered from hunger in 1995, but to those 22 percent of overweight kids who, without knowing it, are starving for good food.

In these days of microwaveable food, less-than-nourishing school lunches, working parents and kids constantly on the run, nutrition falls by the wayside, despite the constant warnings of nutritional watchdogs such as the American Dietetic Organization. Most harassed working parents (working as income-earners, that is--being a parent is work) fail to realize that they can feed their kids, and themselves, healthy and tasty food in the time it takes to dial Domino's or microwave Stouffer's. If they start making changes during the school year, they can avoid meal planning headaches when summer rolls around. We'll teach you how next month.

Next: Set Your Kids Free at Mealtimes


 

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