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Study: Toddlers Have Bad Eating Habits

By T.A. BADGER Associated Press Writer
October 25, 2003, 4:42 PM EDT

SAN ANTONIO -- Even before their second birthday, many American
children are developing the same bad eating habits that plague
the nation's adults -- too much fat, sugar and salt and too
few fruits and vegetables.
A new study of more than 3,000 youngsters found significant
numbers of infants and toddlers are downing french fries, pizza,
candy and soda.
Children aged 1 to 2 years require about 950 calories per day,
but the study found that the median intake for that age group
is 1,220 calories, -- an excess of nearly 30 percent. For those
7 months to 11 months old, the daily caloric surplus was about
20 percent.
"By 24 months, patterns look startlingly similar to some
of the problematic American dietary patterns," said an
overview of the Feeding Infants & Toddlers Study, commissioned
by baby-food maker Gerber Products Co. Recent research has found
that roughly one in every five Americans is now considered obese,
double the rate in the mid-1980s.
"(Your children) are watching you -- they see what you
do," said Chicago-area dietitian Jodie Shield, who has
written two books on child nutrition. "We're on a very
dangerous course if we do not make some changes in helping parents
step up to the plate and be role models."
"Across cultures, it's a positive thing to overfeed your
chubby little baby," said Dorothy DeLessio, a dietitian
at Brown University Medical School in Providence, R.I. But she
added that Americans were crossing over to negative patterns
of "round-cheeked overweight toddler, overweight preschooler,
overweight child, overweight adult."
An overview of the FITS study was presented Saturday at a meeting
of the American Dietetic Association. The complete study results
are to be published in the association's journal in January.
The study involved random telephone interviews conducted in
2002 that asked parents or primary caregivers what their youngsters
ages 4 months to 2 years ate that particular day.
Up to a third of the children under 2 consumed no fruits or
vegetables, according to the survey. And for those who did have
a vegetable, french fries were the most common selection for
children 15 months and older.
Nine percent of children 9 months to 11 months old ate fries
at least once per day. For those 19 months to 2 years old, more
than 20 percent had fries daily.
Hot dogs, sausage and bacon also were daily staples for many
children -- 7 percent in the 9-to-11 month group, and 25 percent
in the older range.
More than 60 percent of 12-month-olds had dessert or candy at
least once per day, and 16 percent ate a salty snack. Those
numbers rose to 70 percent and 27 percent by age 19 months.
Thirty to 40 percent of the children 15 months and up had a
sugary fruit drink each day, and about 10 percent had soda.
Shield said early diets strongly influence children, whose food
preferences are generally shaped between ages 2 and 3.
"If kids are having soda and soft drinks at such an early
age, it's going to be very, very challenging to introduce other
types of foods for them later," she said. The study also
found that parents were ignoring widely accepted
practices by allowing:
* 29 percent of infants to eat solid food before they were 4
months old.
* 17 percent to drink juice before 6 months.
* 20 percent to drink cow's milk before 12 months.
Shortcomings were more pronounced for families receiving financial
assistance through the federal Women, Infants and Children program,
the study found. More than 40 percent of WIC toddlers did not
eat any fruit on the survey day, and those children also drank
more sweetened drinks.
Copyright (c) 2003, The Associated Press
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