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Parenting
Resources -
Press Releases
10 Easy Back-to-School
Tips to Help Children (and Parents!)
Eat Smarter This Fall
By Dr. Edward Abramson
Author of
Body Intelligence: Lose Weight, Keep It
Off, and Feel Great Without Dieting!
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Childhood obesity is at
an all-time high in America, while the overall nutritional value of school
lunches continues to plummet. With only weeks left before children and
teenagers go back to school, how can parents help to control their
children's weight and diet? How can a family dinner be a learning
environment to teach proper nutrition?
Here are ten simple remedies and lifestyle changes for families. I suggest
parents try to Lead By Example
and Create A Healthy Eating Environment
so kids will pick up better eating habits and make better choices on their
own.
Simply adopting one or two small and positive lifestyle changes from the
following Top Ten List will elicit long-term results that will help you and
your family eat better:
Structure Your Family's Eating.
Although hectic schedules can present challenges, don't give up on the idea
of family dinners. Discourage eating on the run and random snacking.
Instead, establish routines for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and after-school
snacks.
Offer a Choice of Several High-Fiber,
Low-Sugar Breakfast Cereals With Milk (skim or 1-percent fat) and/or Fruit.
Check the nutrition information on the box and avoid cereals high in sugar.
Oatmeal, raisin bran, fat-free granola, Cheerios, and shredded wheat are
good choices. If your child is used to sugary cereals, gradually mix in
healthier cereals while reducing the proportion of the sweeter stuff.
Don't Try to Forbid Fast Food or Junk
Food. Consider them as treats to be enjoyed occasionally, but not
in place of regular meals or snacks. If you need to keep cookies in the
house, limit the number of choices and try to buy single serving packages so
there is less temptation to overindulge. Substitute healthier choices
whenever possible -- a child offered nonfat frozen yogurt is unlikely to
miss high-fat ice cream.
Reduce the Number of Distractions While
Your Child is Eating. Turn off the TV. Discourage eating while
playing computer or video games.
Minimize Consumption of Sugar Sodas and
Fruit Juices. The calories in soft drinks have no nutritional
value and don't abate hunger. While eating an apple or grapes reduces
hunger, drinking an apple or grape fruit doesn't.
Serve Reasonably Sized Portions.
If he or she is still hungry, they can ask for seconds. If you misjudge and
serve too much, save the excess for leftovers. Don't encourage the child to
eat the food to avoid wasting it.
Don't Use Food as a Reward.
Don't use one food as a reward for eating other foods. Don't offer food as a
reward for an accomplishment. Conversely,
don't use food to placate. If your child is feeling sad, tend to
the emotions, not the appetite.
Don't Buy Toys That Glorify Junk Food.
Cook New Foods Together.
Encourage your child to help in the kitchen preparing food. And don't assume
that just because your child didn't like it the first time, they might not
ever have it again. Try another day.
Monitor Your Child's School Lunches.
Body Intelligence is not a
traditional diet book with rigid meal plans, low-fat recipes, exercise
guides, and calorie counters. Instead, it offers specific methods to help
the reader understand and regulate eating, improve body image, and learn to
comfortably become more active. It's a unique solution to weight control
that goes to the root of eating problems -- the thought patterns that affect
eating habits, self-perception, and the way people live.
Copyright © 2005 Edward
Abramson, Ph.D.
About
the Author:
Edward Abramson, Ph.D., is a
professor of psychology at California State University and former director
of the Eating Disorders Center at Chico Community Hospital. He has written
several books, including Body
Intelligence
(McGraw-Hill; $21.95US; 0071442065) and
Emotional Eating, and has been
published in dozens of scientific publications. He has appeared on
television's "20/20," "Good Day LA," and other shows.
For more information,
please visit:
www.dredabramson.com.
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