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Fight Fat Even in Toddlers, Report Warns
Filed under: In The News, Nutrition: Toddlers & Preschoolers, Research Reveals: Toddlers & Preschoolers
Credit: Keith Brofsky, Getty
That's a growing problem: Already, one in five preschoolers - 2- to 5-year-olds - is overweight or obese.
Topping the list of proposed changes: better guidelines to help parents and caregivers know just how much toddlers should eat as they move from baby food to bigger-kid fare. And making sure preschoolers get at least 15 minutes of physical activity for every hour they spend in child care.
Thursday's recommendations, from the Institute of Medicine, aren't about putting the very young on diets. But those early pounds can lead to lasting bad effects on their health as children grow, says the report.
"It's a huge opportunity to instill good habits at a time when you don't have to change old ones," said Leann Birch, director of Pennsylvania State University's Center for Childhood Obesity Research, who chaired the IOM panel.
Consider: Babies drink milk until they're full and then turn away. But children as young as 2 or 3 are sensitive to portion size, important in not inadvertently training them to overeat.
"If you give them larger portions, they eat more," Birch explained.
Pediatricians generally give pretty explicit directions on how to feed babies. And the nation's dietary guidelines include a special section for preschoolers, including information that a portion size generally is about 1 tablespoon of each food type per year of age.
But overall, those national guidelines are aimed at ages 2 and older - though surveys show even very young children eat too few of the fruits and vegetables they need. So the institute called on the government to create consumer-friendly dietary guidelines for birth to age 2.
That would capture the "dramatic dietary transition that occurs, from consuming one single food to, by the time they're 2, ordering up things from McDonald's and, we hope, having also learned to eat a lot of healthy foods," Birch said.
That will be part of the discussion during the next dietary guidelines update in 2015, said Robert Post, deputy director of the Agriculture Department's Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion, which oversees that process. But developing guidelines for these younger children is complex because their nutrition needs are based in part on developmental stage, he cautioned.
Of course, parents have the biggest influence over whether healthy eating and being active become a child's norm.
But the report makes the case that children's habits are influenced by far more than their parents - and thus it's time to expand obesity prevention to more of the other places youngsters spend time. For example, nearly three-fourths of children ages 2 to 5 spend at least part of their day in some form of child care.
Among the recommendations:
-Day care and preschool operators should be trained in proper physical activity for young children, provide at least 15 minutes of it per hour, and avoid withholding physical activity as a punishment.
-Child care regulations should limit how long toddlers and preschoolers sit or stand still to no more than 30 minutes at a time - and limit holding babies in swings, bouncy seats or other equipment while they're awake.
-Day care and preschools should practice what's called responsive feeding: providing age-appropriate portion sizes, teaching children to serve themselves properly, requiring adults to sit with and eat the same foods as the children and following babies' cues as to when they've had enough.
-Breastfed infants are less likely to become obese later in childhood, so doctors and hospitals should encourage breastfeeding and limit formula samples aimed at new moms.
-At checkups, doctors should consider the parents' weight in assessing which children are at risk of later obesity, and then alert parents early that preventive steps are needed. About 10 percent of infants and toddlers already weigh too much for their length.
-To increase healthful eating among the poorest children, the government should take steps to get more families who are eligible for federal nutrition-assistance programs to sign up.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. This article was written by Lauran Neergaard, Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
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ReaderComments (Page 1 of 2)
6-24-2011 @ 2:06PM
Ron said...Tubby but cute
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6-24-2011 @ 2:23PM
Wayne Deputy Sr. said...Here's a thought why don't people just mind thier own bussiness and don't worry about running somebody else's life.
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6-24-2011 @ 2:58PM
Amy Pennock said...The problem with minding our own business is that irresponsible parenting leads to bad overall health in childhood and adulthood. Then us healthy people have to pay for that person's healthcare later on through taxes etc. If people don't want the government stepping in with universal healthcare, it's time that parents started making the right decisions when it comes to their kids' diets, because that is where bad health begins.
6-24-2011 @ 5:36PM
Joe said...No one is capable of that anymore. People hate their lives so much that they have to bring the rest of the world down. As for Amy, most kids grow out of being fat babies. What? We're obsessing over the diet from birth now?
6-24-2011 @ 6:05PM
Sharon Smith said...I agree with Amy Pennock 100%. Good habits begin from CHILDHOOD, not only food but everyday lifestyle. Usually doctors tell parents about the weight chart in every checkup that between 5th and 95th percentile are normal under 2 years old but usually after that age children become more active and loose a lot of weight so if that is not case, then parents do need to pay more attention and IT IS everybody else's business because of what Amy Pennock said.
6-24-2011 @ 2:46PM
diamndldy3 said...No where in that article does it talk about the size of the baby at birth and the different caloric requirements needed!! Three of my four children weighed between 9 1/2 lbs and 10lbs at birth. They were big, healthy babies and outgrew the "baby fat" by the time that they were 18 months old. They were very active and very slim. I just wish that those who write these "tips" were tell the whole story, not just the alarming parts.
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6-24-2011 @ 4:33PM
diana said...I agree. my girls were both the same size as you just mentioned. they both had not only a healthy amount of babyfat, they were also tall and had big heads! they are both walking now, one is two the other is four and both have no real 'chubbyness' left. just that sort of soft, not toned look all kids have until they get older. What really enrages me is these people are talking about the portion size and calories and ignoring the research that points out, oh, by the way maybe you shouldn't be giving a one year old Mc'Donalds and soda and donuts!
I let my girls eat whatever they wanted at mealtimes, and they always chose things like brocolli, fish, potatos and so on. They were given a few sweets, a cookie once in a long while and no soda at all except maybe a sip off mommy or daddy's at the resturaunt. they drink milk juice, iced tea, koolaid and water. they are both healthy and energetic.
if your kid doesnt burn off the babyfat when they start to crawl, walk and run, thats when you need to start looking at portion size. before then, ignore online BS and listen to the pediatrician. Ill be damned if I let some jerkoff tell me my kid can only eat 4 tablespoons of food.
6-24-2011 @ 6:44PM
old enough to remember said...You are so right! One of my aunts told me that my cousin (much older then me) was of average weight when born. By one year, he weighed almost 50 lbs. As an adult, he is almost 7 ft. tall. My own son was 35 lbs. by one year. As a child and even now as a young adult, he is at the right weight for his height.
6-24-2011 @ 2:46PM
Kristi said...Because people are making poor decisons and are creating eating/health
issues for their children just like they have. That's why.
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6-24-2011 @ 3:12PM
GJ said...My Grandauthers were all Big like the Babies Picture. Now they are 9 - 12 years old and tall and skinny. Every Time these so called experts tell us about this subject and other subjects they find out they were wrong a few years later, but never report they made a mistake.
I think everyone has their own DNA programed into them when born and will just grow to be what God intended.
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6-24-2011 @ 4:16PM
Gia said...It used to be looked upon as cute to see a chubby baby. Now we know it's just dooming the poor kid to having blown up fat cells that always scream to be fed for the rest of their lives. Nobody wants to see a skinny baby but these people that are lugging around huge babies that clearly are overweight, aren't doing any good for that poor kid's future! If anything, there's more children these days with high cholesterol and diabetes than ever before. Go back to eating home cooked meals and lots of play time.
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6-24-2011 @ 4:00PM
Tess said...Kristi, who commented at 2:46 p.m., is correct. I see mothers of babies and toddlers, giving their kids french fries and coke to sip on from McDonald's. It's ridiculous. What else is ridiculous, and I don't know how they get through, are the stupid people who use a few key words that have something to do with an article, and then try to sell some weight loss, job at home, or find a man-type of crap. Why aren't these things better filtered? And don't get me started on the people who can't spell.....
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6-24-2011 @ 4:21PM
DANNY said...ILLEGAL ALIENS ANCHOR BABIES ARE FAT DISGUSTING SLOBS JUST LIKE THEIR MOTHERS.
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6-24-2011 @ 4:29PM
Mary said...There is nothing cute about this fat baby. It is very sad. I hope parents can get help with this problem before it becomes so out of control.
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6-24-2011 @ 4:39PM
S.Mcrae said...This is all just ridiculous! Over weight babies? Please!!! You guys need to quit. My baby is chunky and beautiful. Every time we go to the doctors they tell me she is 90% heavier than children in her age group, they said the same about my son when he was a baby. Now as a 6 year old they say he is too skinny. As he got older he started to run more, play more, and so will she. I fed my child when she is hungry and don't stop til she is full. Both me and my husband are "underweight" and eat everything under the sun! Can't we just be happy with trying to be healthy and nothing else. A healthy size for you is not the same for me. And if my baby is hungry I'm gonna feed her, point blank. Get over yourselves...
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6-24-2011 @ 5:05PM
scarrozza1234 said...My son was over 10 pounds at birth and 23 inches long. Yes a huge baby. Now a 23 year old man, he stands 5'7 160. You cannot judge what a baby will turn into as an adult. stop alarming people.
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6-24-2011 @ 5:06PM
charlesharris53 said...okay you fat little babies, hit the weight bench, give 20 reps.....jog in place for 30 minutes....give me 20 pushups.... come on you fat little pigs, you can do better than that....quote by michelle obama.
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6-24-2011 @ 5:09PM
GimmeaBreak said...Parents don't need more subsidies! They need EDUCATION!
Babies should eat mostly meat, (protein) fruit, vegetables and cereal. There is simply no good reason to feed a baby chicken and noodles, or pastas with tomato sauce. GUARD their taste buds from acquiring this taste in the first place!
I know a very fat ten month-old who will only eat pasta. This was caused by her mother's ignorance and indulgence.
Feed your baby proper amount of meat, vegetables, fruit and cereal. If your child doesn't like meat, buy the meat / vegetable mixtures. If that doesn't work, mix fruit and meat.
Then there's always the option of letting them miss ONE meal, so they will be less picky, at the next one.
Another huge problem is babies who have constant access to a bottle full of milk. This keeps them from getting hungry. In 30 years of performing daycare, I have not seen ONE infant or toddler given water to drink by a parent. Not one!
And remember that pasteurized cows' milk contains antibiotics, (because the cows are kept in crowded, filthy conditions) steroids, and hormones (to make them produce more milk.) That's why we have girls going thru puberty at age 9.
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6-25-2011 @ 10:42AM
PaulD said...It is not antibiotics in cow's milk that causes girls to have puberty, as children have much lower cow milk intake than 20 years ago. It is actually soy, especially soy milk, that has been wreaking havoc, as it has phyto-estrogen in it. Children under the age of 12 should not have more than 1 serving a day of soy, which with the new adult eating fads is having extreme effects on young girls. You are very right about the water factor. We focused on this as our toddler was young and he enjoys water, having a glass every night before bed (which is also good for their teeth). This definitely helps and kids like the habits that are instilled in them early on. We also water down his juice.
I don't think it is how MUCH a child eats but WHAT a child eats, similar to what you said. Parents give their kids junk food because that is what the parents eat. The first step is parents eating better, not forcing a toddler to diet-that is ridiculous. Toddlers should choose how much they eat, parents should choose what they eat. Give them a cheese stick or apple as a snack, not Doritos and cookies. If a child is hungry, they should be fed. Restricting food intake and giving them junk food are both neglect
6-24-2011 @ 5:23PM
kristenmoyers said...I agree with this completely. First off - it's not so much talking about birth weight as it is after that, a lot of parents will shove a bottle in a baby's mouth every time he/she cries. I've seen so many moms that leave their babies in their carrier all day, when the baby whines, he/she gets a bottle. The back of their heads are flat from being laid on their back all the time, and at 6 mos they don't even have the muscle strength to begin to sit up. I'm not talking about developmentally disabled babies, but babies whose parents find it more convenient for the child to be quiet than to take the time to hold them and help them sit up. It's sickening how lazy parents have become
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