Cheese and Veggies: Filling Up Kids on Fewer Calories

18 Dec, 2012

via Cornell University

Cheese and veggie snackAlmost every­one is famil­iar with the alarm­ing trend of child­hood obe­sity. 32% of U.S. chil­dren are over­weight or obese accord­ing to the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. One of the many fac­tors lead­ing to the obe­sity epi­demic is increased snack­ing in chil­dren. Today chil­dren eat around three snacks daily while thirty years ago they ate only one. Parents want to ensure that their chil­dren snack health­fully, but restrict­ing or lim­it­ing children’s snack­ing can back­fire. Children in homes where par­ents care­fully reg­u­late snack­ing were found to eat more unhealthy snacks in an unreg­u­lated envi­ron­ment than chil­dren with less restric­tive parents.

Researchers Brian Wansink, Ph.D., Mitsuru Shimizu, Ph.D., and Adam Brumberg set out to dis­cover whether cer­tain types of snacks would lead chil­dren to feel full while con­sum­ing fewer calo­ries. 201 stu­dents in the third through sixth grade were given either a plate of potato chips, a plate of veg­eta­bles, a plate of cheese, or a plate of veg­eta­bles and cheese while watch­ing some of their favorite after­school car­toons. They were asked about their full­ness at the begin­ning of the exper­i­ment, after watch­ing one episode of a car­toon, and again after watch­ing a sec­ond episode of a cartoon.

Healthy Snacks for Kids

Children who ate the veg­etable and cheese snack plate needed sig­nif­i­cantly fewer calo­ries than the chil­dren who ate the plate of potato chips to achieve sati­ety. Further, chil­dren from low-involvement fam­i­lies (fam­i­lies which spent less time eat­ing meals together or inter­act­ing with each other while eat­ing) ate more potato chips than other chil­dren when given potato chips to snack on. 

However, chil­dren from low-involvement fam­i­lies and over­weight chil­dren showed the great­est reduc­tion in the amount of calo­ries con­sumed when eat­ing the cheese and veg­etable snack instead of potato chips.

Overweight and obese chil­dren ate 76% fewer calo­ries when they were given the cheese and veg­etable snack while other chil­dren aver­aged a 60% reduc­tion in calo­ries eaten. Both groups reported being as full when eat­ing the Cheese and veg­gie snack as they did when eat­ing chips.

Use these results to help your child eat fewer calo­ries when snack­ing, try:

  • Having more nutri­tious snacks avail­able instead of elim­i­nat­ing snacking
  • Substituting a health­ier snack like veg­gies and cheese in place of chips on a reg­u­lar basis
  • Offering smaller quan­ti­ties of a vari­ety of healthy snacks (mul­ti­ple kinds of veg­eta­bles or fruit) on a plate.  Variety tends to stim­u­late con­sump­tion; increas­ing the healthy options avail­able can lead to more of them being selected and eaten.
  • Encouraging chil­dren to be mind­ful of inter­nal cues and stop eat­ing when they feel full

 

Click here to read the full paper.

 

Source: Cornell University release

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