Your teenager looks healthy and
acts healthy… so what’s wrong with a treat here and
there, a few fast food meals a week? A lot, it turns out.
Just ask kids how often they eat out these days, and you’ll
likely hear answer like these:
“I’d say maybe about three or four times a week,” says
Corey, who’s 18.
“Most of my friends probably go out every day, or a couple
of times a day, to eat,” says 16-year-old Sabrina.
Shelly, who’s 15, eats out, “Almost every day, as
weird as that sounds.”
It’s not weird at all. In fact, American Heart Association
research found one in five American kids dine out at least four
times a week.
“They’re going to get exposure to refined processed
foods which might mean sugar, more white flour products, definitely
more hidden fats, more saturated fats,” explains Page Love,
a registered dietitian.
That puts them at risk for higher cholesterol and blood pressure,
which can lead to heart problems.
And a surprising finding: normal-size kids face the same
risk as obese kids…
“I see a number of kids already that have high cholesterol,
high triglycerides in the early pre-teen ages,” says Love. “They
can’t feel the change… they can’t feel that
their body is starting to go through some unhealthy changes, but
things are happening at a cellular, blood-vessel level already
at very young ages.”
So what can parents do? First, set a good example…
“If the parents are ordering fried chicken and french fries,
or a cheeseburger and french fries, the child most often will model
and follow what the parent does,” explains Love.
And she says you can make the family dinner a priority, “And
having the kids participate in the cooking process… and
having them have a little bit more ownership and interest in the
actual food choices that are served.”
But, she says, it may take some time — to change your child’s
unhealthy habits…
Shelly is a good example. “I believe it all,” she
says, “but at the same time I just don’t really care
that much, cause it’s just… it tastes really good.
I mean it can’t do that much harm, I guess?”
The study also reveals that kids who eat out more often are significantly
less active than their peers, spending close to an average of an
hour more per day in sedentary activities such as playing video games
and watching television. |
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