CHILDRENŐS NUTRITION
Lawrence Wilson, MD
© March 2011, The Center
For Development
From
before birth, nutrition plays a critical role in childrenŐs health.
Junk food, in the form of sugars, soft drinks, white flour products and
hydrogenated vegetable oils can destroy children's health. Caffeine and hundreds of ŇFDA-approvedÓ chemical additives also
harm children. As a result,
infections, obesity, diabetes and cancer are increasing among children. Other nutrition-related problems
include ADHD, learning disorders, delayed development, depression and many
cases of autism.
WHAT CAN PARENTS DO?
Most
parents want to feed their children correctly, but are not well-informed or are
so busy and tired themselves that nutrition may fall by the wayside. Yet parents
are the key to a childŐs nutrition.
BECOME INFORMED
* Read many of the nutrition articles on this website. Perhaps subscribe to
a good natural health magazine.
Beware, however, as the volume of information available can be totally
confusing.
* Know that most children today are born nutritionally deficient
and toxic, no matter how normal they appear. Many go into adrenal burnout at age 2
or even less in some cases. In
other words, children today are very unhealthy. This is the reason children are having so many problems in
school, with learning and behavior, with infections and more.
* As a general principle, children do not need more drugs and
vaccines, as the doctors too often prescribe. They need to be breastfed until around
age 3, they need to eat far better quality food, and the older ones need to
rest more and drink much more water.
* In spite of what doctors and the FDA may report, sugar in all
forms, including fruit, damages children's health. SugarŐs empty
calories actually deplete the body of vitamins and minerals. Sugars also upset calcium metabolism
and the insulin mechanism, and can cause hypoglycemia and diabetes. Few would feed to their dog what many
allow their children to eat.
One can of soda pop may contain up to 8 teaspoons of sugar.
* Children are exposed to huge amounts of toxic additives like
aspartame (Equal or Nutrasweet).
Aspartame accounts for over 75 percent of the adverse reactions to food
additives reported to the US Food and Drug Administration. Aspartame causes over 90 adverse
symptoms, according to a 1994 Department of Health and Human Services
report. Many are very serious,
such as anxiety attacks, memory loss, diabetes, brain tumors, seizures and
death.
Other
harmful chemicals include caffeine in soft drinks, MSG in soup mixes and
nitrites used to preserve packaged meats.
These can have horrendous side effects in many children.
* Bleached white flour and
hydrogenated vegetable oils found in hundreds of prepared foods are also
harmful.
PLAN FAMILY MEALS
* Make eating and family
meals an important and a pleasant task.
Food is your connection with the earth, with nature, with each other and
a basis for good health. Excellent
nutrition is also required for the full development of a human being. Move away from the Ňpit stopÓ mentality
- that eating is like filling the
car with gasoline, basically a waste of time. Eating in a hurry or in a car wastes most of your food, as
it is not well-digested.
* Commit to preparing
simple meals at home. Consider taking cooking classes if needed, perhaps even
with your child. Use a crock pot
for an easy, tasty meal. Place
whole vegetables, chicken or other food in the pot with a little water and set
it for eight hours. Food will not
burn, and will be hot at dinnertime.
Microwave ovens are not the best. However, using one, preferably on a limited basis, is
better than not cooking at all.
* Plan your familyŐs life around family meals, not the other
way around. Family meals are much appreciated by
children. Make meals relaxing
and enjoyable. Start by saying
grace to set the mood. Studies
prove this simple act can enhance the quality of the food. Light a candle or use special napkins
or plates to make meals special.
* Have the family sit
together at the table and maintain a happy, peaceful mood. Following the mealŐs
blessing, my friend Megan has each child in turn say the best thing that
happened to them during the day.
Definitely turn off the TV and radio during meals.
* Discuss meal planning
with children and give them healthy choices. Children like to participate in such decisions. Pre-planning the weekŐs menus can save
time and money.
Also involve children in
preparing meals. Many children
love having their own chefŐs hat and apron, and love to imagine they are
running a restaurant.
* Find creative ways to
entice children with healthy food.
Make up child-friendly names for healthy concoctions like ÔDannyŐs
DelightŐ. Stir-fried ground turkey
and shredded vegetables, topped with a little chile sauce on a corn tortilla
makes ÔSlippery JoesŐ, a childŐs favorite.
* If your children like nut
butter, mix some with water to make a dressing and cover vegetables with it, or
cover them with spaghetti sauce if this is more appealing. Make objectionable-tasting vegetables
into vegetable soup to disguise the flavor. Try new vegetables along with the children.
SHOPPING
* Read labels as much as
possible. Fewer ingredients are
better. A good general rule is if
you cannot pronounce an ingredient or donŐt know what it is, donŐt eat it. Buy organically grown meat, dairy and
produce as much as possible. These
contain much less toxic pesticides, growth hormones and other harmful
chemicals.
* Avoid the big four:
sugar, refined flour, hydrogenated oils and chemical additives. Especially avoid aspartame, (Nutrasweet
or Equal). Xylitol,
sorbitol, or stevia are not as harmful.
However, do your best to avoid all sweeteners and to move away from the
sweetening habit entirely. Look
for hidden sugars under names like dextrose, sucrose, maltose, corn syrup,
invert sugar, fruit juices, barley malt, rice syrup, maple syrup and
honey. If these are among the
first three ingredients, the food is mostly sugar.
* Shop at health food
markets to find better quality food.
Trader JoeŐs is less expensive on many items. Shop the outside isles of the supermarket.
* Keep basic foods stocked
all the time such as Foster Farms or other natural chicken and turkey, natural
hamburger or lamb, vegetables, and not much fruit except maybe a few berries or
other juicy fruits. Dried fruit
and juices are too sweet. If you
must use fruit juices, dilute them with a
lot with water. Children do
not need fruit or sweets at all.
They do need plenty of quality fats and oils, however, in their diets,
such as those in certified certified raw dairy products.
If
you cannot buy all fresh food, frozen meals are still better than most
restaurant food, especially quality frozen meals.
* Avoid most canned
food. Canned tuna is very high in
mercury. However, canned salmon
and especially sardines are fine.
* Avoid buying candy,
cookies, donuts, ice cream and other sugary snacks as much as possible. Buy only quality food. Keep only quality snacks around the
house such as carrots, celery, goat cheese and blue corn tortilla chips. Put out fresh carrots and celery with
dip after school and watch them disappear.
* Avoid buying fluoridated
toothpaste. Fluoride is a
poison. The same chemical is used
in rat poison. Question the entire
fluoride myth. Go to www.fluoridealert.org for more information.
TEACHING CHILDREN ABOUT NUTRITION
* The most important thing
is to set a good example for your children. It will help your health as well.
* Explain to your children
why nutrition matters. Share books,
articles or videos with them.
Discuss with them why we
choose to eat healthy food so they can make good food choices.
* Refer to healthy food as
Ômuscle foodŐ and the rest as junk food. Teach children to always finish muscle food
first.
* When shopping, have
children look into other shopperŐs grocery carts, and then at the person
pushing the cart. The nutrition
connection is often obvious.
* Be your childrenŐs
nutrition guardian, not another friend who tempts them or wins them over with
junk food
* Avoid letting your
children eat what they wish, because you feel guilty for working all day or not
giving them what they want.
* Do not reward children
with sweets or other junk food. It
equates eating junk food with being happy or good. This will cause problems later in life.
* Limit television viewing,
as it exposes your children to hundreds of junk food commercials that mislead
them.
FRIENDS, SCHOOL AND PARTIES
* Controlling your
childrenŐs eating when they are with friends is difficult. Children do not like to feel different
or strange because they cannot eat certain foods.
* The best approach is to
help your children make good food decisions. Ask your child to pay attention to how he or she feels
immediately after eating junk food and a few hours later. This can help him or her see the
connection between food and health.
* Use whatever will help
motivate your child to eat better.
Your child may want to have better skin, grow taller or be strong and
better at sports. Some children may
want to get sick less often, have more energy or get better grades in
school. Quality food can help all
of these.
* Your children should influence their friends when it comes
to nutrition, not the other way around.
If you notice your child comes back with junk food from certain friends,
talk briefly to both children about why these foods are not healthful. They may taste good in the mouth, but
the stomach does not like them at all, as they contain harmful chemicals and
lack nutrition.
* Seek out other parents
who feel the same way you do and exchange ideas, recipes, books and
experiences.
SCHOOL LUNCHES
* Pack healthy school
lunches, or better yet, educate your children at home and avoid the school
lunches that are often questionable.
Preferably avoid wheat or spelt breads as they are less healthful.
* Try non-wheat breads or
tortillas. Blue corn chips make an
excellent snack or use them as part of a meal of cooked vegetables and meat,
preferably. Some stores sell an
excellent rice and millet bread. A
thermos of vegetable soup with turkey, chicken or occasionally beef are also
excellent. Avoid Lunchables and
most packaged convenience foods.
Many may look like food, when indeed they are not.
* Beware that almost all
Ôfood barsŐ are too sweet and should be avoided. Most trail mix and granola bars are also mostly sugar or
hard to digest and not healthful.
Send along an extra bag if your child trades with the other children.
* Stay away from high-sugar drinks, especially soda pop. Others to avoid are Gatorade and other
sugary juices. Milk is not a great
food for many children. However,
it is far superior to soda pop.
Goat milk is better. You
may include a small bottle of spring water. All juice, however, is too sweet for most children, so limit
juices. The only exception is a
small glass of carrot juice, which is excellent and tasty for most
children. Herbal teas or water are
generally best.
* Speak up to school
authorities that you object to the sale of junk food in schools, and to parents
bringing junk food treats into the classrooms for parties. Progressive school districts in
Chicago, Philadelphia, New York and elsewhere have banned junk food from their
cafeterias with good results.
Recently, the Appleton, Wisconsin high school decided to replace all
junk food with healthier choices.
The principalŐs annual report showed vast improvements in behavior and
grades. Make it happen in your
school district, too, or pull your child out of public schools where junk food
is often far too available to children and the general nutrition consciousness
is often very low.
EATING OUT
* Ethnic restaurants often
make food from scratch.
Buffets allow you to see what you eat before you choose.
* Do your best to avoid
fast food restaurants. If you must
go, Burger King and Taco Bell are among the best. Help children make good choices at these places, avoiding
the greasy nuggets and French fries.
These are often soaked in carcinogenic refined vegetable oil.
IF YOUR CHILD GETS SICK
* Avoid giving Tylenol or
other drugs to lower fevers below 103-104ˇ F.
Fever is beneficial and the bodyŐs natural mechanism to kill germs. It also encourages children to slow
down.
* Have your child rest
lying down and eat very lightly when ill. Most illness is self-limiting and does not require drug
treatment. Avoid rewarding
children for being sick with too much attention.
* Apply harmless natural
remedies immediately. A very
simple and effective treatment is foot massage, which feels good, too. Rub the whole foot, bottom, top and
sides including the toes, five to ten minutes on each foot. Even without reflexology training, this
can relax a child, stop a headache and much more.
* For colds and other
infections, use herbs such as echinacea.
Vitamin A is also excellent.
Up to 75,000 iu per day for up to two to three weeks is safe for
children over 10. Below age 10,
use 50,000 iu per day for up to three weeks.
Vitamin
C will sometimes work. Zinc
lozenges with Echinacea are very good.
Low-dose colloidal silver will kill most infections with many fewer side
effects than antibiotics.
Arabesque is an excellent brand.
For prevention, give your child a 10,000 iu vitamin A capsule every few
days.
* When you need
professional guidance, consider a well-informed nutritionally-oriented doctor
or chiropractor.
* Become aware of the
adverse effects of drugs before giving them to children. Many doctors do not
know the side effects of drugs they prescribe. Side effects can be worse than the illness. Look up adverse effects in the
Physicians Desk Reference. On the
internet, one can go to www.PDRhealth.com. Do not take antibiotics or give them to children ever, if
possible. Always try the natural
alternatives first. Antibiotics
have plenty of subtle side effects.
* Vaccinations can be quite
harmful. At least read
about both sides of the vaccine story before deciding whether or not to
vaccinate your child. I do not
recommend vaccines at all, but, of course, this is a personal decision for
every parent.
Do
not be intimidated by school or other authorities. In Arizona, school nurses should have a form called Request for Exemption to Immunization
that can easily release you from school immunization requirements. To learn more, read Vaccination on this website.
References
Many
more articles on childrenŐs health and nutrition are at www.drlwilson.com/Articles
Dossey, L., The Power of Prayer
Fallon, S., Nourishing Traditions
McEntire, P., Mommy, IŐm Hungry
Smith, L., Feed Kids Right
Tubbs, J., If You CanŐt Pronounce It, DonŐt Eat
It. A Basic Guide to Healthier
Eating
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