Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Junky diet and tv for kids = overweight adults

Imagine yourself looking in a mirror at age 10 catching a glimpse of your 30 or 40 year old body. Would you be horrified or just slightly freaked out? Dr. Oz used this interesting tactic on yesterday's Oprah to drive home the importance of getting kids to eat healthfully from the get go. He showed a 10 year old boy his 400 pound body at 40 if he continued to eat junk and live a sedentary life for the next 30 years.
As a dietitian, I work with children and parents to help families start implementing healthier lifestyle habits. (Having a video depiction to show them the consequences of not making these changes would help tremendously in compliance, I imagine.) I've found the most important key to success is making changes the whole family follows. So, while you're working on getting your own 30 or 40 year old body (or at any age really) into the shape you would've been proud to see in that mirror at age 10, make sure the rest of the family follows suit. And while the choices available to kids -- check out this article in U.S. News and World Report on unhealthy foods available in schools -- is a critical component (read:buy lots of fruits and vegetables), educating your children, no matter how young, that eating nutritious foods make the body strong and healthy is just as important. Even my two year old knows that fruits are good for him, while donuts are only a once-in-a-while dessert.

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