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Getting Your Tween to Eat Healthy Foods

Posted on January 29th, 2010 by Onslow Alison

Food Table

As we wrap up our conversations discussing tween nutrition this month, it might be a great time to look at OHealthy’s article “Teaching Your Kids to Choose Good Foods.” Here’s an excerpt:

According to Joel Steinberg, M.D., professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas and supervisor of a weight-guidance clinic at the school, it’s up to parents to ensure that today’s children don’t turn into tomorrow’s artery-clogged, diabetic, obese adults.

And parents can start as soon as infants are ready for solid food, such as beans, peas and carrots, in baby-food form.

“When you move to table foods, offer those same foods — and don’t doctor them up with ketchup, butter, salt or cheese,” he says.

All is not lost if a preschooler or grade-schooler has already had a taste of chicken nuggets and won’t eat a baked chicken breast as a result. Dr. Steinberg advises parents to place healthy foods on children’s plates during mealtimes anyway.

“Don’t force them to eat the food,” he adds. “Even if they don’t eat it right away, they’re curious and will eventually try it.”

Also resist the temptation to prepare separate meals for children.

“Everyone eats the same, or they don’t eat,” says Dr. Steinberg. “In other words, if your 6-year-old doesn’t eat his vegetables, he goes without.  When he gets hungry enough he gets another chance to eat his vegetables.”

Do as I do

You should also look at your own diet if you want your children to be healthy eaters. Kids follow their parents’ lead. It’s not fair, for example, to tell them they need to eat vegetables while you chow down on a pizza. If you eat a well-balanced diet, your kids also are likely to eat well.

Encouraging healthy eating means more than serving healthy foods — it means lifestyle changes, as well. Dr. Steinberg recommends that all meals, including snacks, be eaten at the table with the television off.

The television — and computer — should be kept off at other times during the day as well, in order to encourage a less sedentary lifestyle.

“It’s amazing,” says Dr. Steinberg. “People walk their dogs every day, but they don’t walk with their children every day.”

So next time Fido is leashed up, take the children, too.

Dr. Steinberg acknowledges that adults have little influence over children’s eating habits once the youngsters reach middle school.

“But if you bring them up in a home where they eat the right food, their diets tend to be easier to maintain and they tend to make the right choices,” he says.

Visit OHealthy to read the entire article.

How do you inspire your tween to choose the right food?

 

thomas-brock

Active Kids are Healthy Kids

Posted on December 4th, 2009 by Thomas Brock

Photograph Titled Kids_on_the_run_track_meet0 by Flickr user zhurnaly.Feel free to file this under “Things We Already Knew,” but a recent report from the MRC Epidemiology Unit in the U.K. says kids do not spend enough time running around and, it seems that even when children are at play, they often don’t play hard enough to combat childhood obesity.

“Interventions may therefore need to incorporate higher intensity-based activities to curb the growing obesity epidemic,” they conclude.

And that’s an issue that I’ve had with Mini, lately. She doesn’t enjoy physical education class in school (she apparently can’t play dodgeball well and isn’t that good at basketball- both traits she probably got from me) so she doesn’t put forth the effort necessary to get a good sweat. She doesn’t live in the best neighborhood, so she doesn’t get a lot of outside play time at home, either.

AM and I try to get Mini to the park, but with winter coming, I’m kind of at a loss for ideas on how to keep her active. Maybe we’ll try walking around local parks, but even that may not be a hard-enough effort to ward off winter weight gain. Maybe we’ll try some children’s exercise videos during the “way-too-cold-to-be-outside” days.

Hopefully that and some healthier food choices will keep Mini from packing on pounds that she may never work off. And the healthier food will be good for AM and I, as we’re battling chubbiness from the other side of the age scale.

How do you keep your tweens active and healthy? Ask questions, make suggestions or share your ideas in the comments.




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