Parents, take heart: You can teach your child to eat healthier. A study of preadolescent children found that those who attended a behaviorally oriented nutrition education program and were taught to follow a diet low in saturated fat and dietary cholesterol adopted significantly better dietary habits over several years compared to their peers who received only general nutritional information.
The study showed that after three years, children in the intervention group consumed more than 67 percent of their total calories on average from heart-healthy foods, compared to less than 57 percent for children in the usual care group.
The results, published in the June issue of Pediatrics, are from a new ancillary study of the Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC). Scientists reviewed dietary recalls from 595 children who were ages 8 to 10 and who had high blood cholesterol levels at the start of the study. The researchers analyzed dietary information by food groups and measured adherence to recommended food patterns and changes over time.
These new findings offer valuable lessons for finding effective ways to help children develop healthier eating habits – a critical need in light of the rising rates of obesity and related conditions among children, said Elizabeth G. Nabel, MD, director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which sponsored the study. NHLBI is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The study provides glimpses of real-world eating behavior and reveals the challenges of trying to eat a healthy diet in a fast-paced world. For example, the study documents a long-suspected phenomenon of modern society: approximately one-third of the total daily calories consumed by the children in both groups came from snack foods, desserts, and pizza.
The main DISC trial is the first long-term clinical trial of the effects of a fat-reduced dietary intervention on growing children. Over the seven years of the original study, children who adopted a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet decreased their intake of total fat, saturated fat and cholesterol within the first year of the study and maintained lower levels for several more years. Those selected for the intervention group participated in a nutrition education program which included a behavioral component to promote healthier eating. Parents of the children in the intervention group participated in a similar program. Researchers previously reported that the dietary changes made by children in the intervention group did not adversely affect the children?s nutritional status, growth, or development.
In the latest analysis, researchers analyzed the dietary recalls collected over three days at the beginning of the study and again after three years. They found that the dairy food group and the desserts/snacks/pizza group had the greatest impact on the children?s body mass index (BMI) and their levels of LDL, or bad, cholesterol. Girls and boys who consumed more dairy products were more likely to have a lower BMI. In addition, boys who consumed more desserts, snacks, and pizza were more likely to have higher BMI and LDL levels.
Specific foods within each food group were also classified based on the ingredients or preparation methods as either Whoa foods those that were high in saturated fat and dietary cholesterol or heart-healthy Go foods those that were low in saturated fat and dietary cholesterol.
Compared to baseline, after three years, children in the intervention group consumed more of the Go food choices in all of the food groups except fruit, and they consumed fewer of the Whoa food choices with one exception: pizza. They also consumed on average slightly fewer snacks and desserts after three years compared to the usual care group. In addition, children in the intervention group chose more Go versions of desserts (such as lowfat frozen yogurt, gelatin or angel food cake) and more Go versions of pizza (such as those made with lowfat cheese) compared to those in the usual care group. However, the authors note, children in both groups ate fewer than recommended servings of fruits and vegetables.
The intervention group?s greater consumption of total daily calories from Go foods shows that children and their families can be taught to improve children?s diets, according to Linda Van Horn, PhD, RD, professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, lead author of the study.
You can raise a child to enjoy healthy eating and to be selective about food choices. Habits developed in childhood will hopefully last throughout their lives, said Van Horn. With the right guidance and nutrition education, children learn to prefer healthy foods such as carrots and raisins or cereal as snacks, for example. We could really help improve both the nutritional quality and energy balance of our children?s diets by teaching them to make healthy food choices at an early age.
Eva Obarzanek, PhD, RD, NHLBI nutritionist and DISC project officer, agrees that most children could benefit from healthier eating patterns like those followed by DISC participants. DISC has shown that following a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol is safe for children in this age group and a heart-healthy diet can lower blood cholesterol levels, she noted.
Lower levels of LDL cholesterol are known to reduce the risk for heart disease. Obarzanek added, It?s never too early to start protecting your heart or your child?s heart.
Studies have shown that atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries – the leading cause of heart disease – begins in childhood. The National Cholesterol Education Program recommends that children over the age of about 2 years, as well as all adults, adopt a heart-healthy eating pattern to reduce their risk of developing heart disease as adults. Children and adults can also lower their risk by maintaining a healthy weight and by being physically active.
Parents and others play an important role in shaping their children?s dietary habits. In addition to being strong advocates for their children by helping them learn to make good food choices, parents and other adults need to take responsibility for ensuring that children have access to healthy foods at home, at school, and at sporting or recreational events, Van Horn added. For example, when it?s your turn to bring the snack for the kids on the soccer team, instead of chips or candy, how about having orange slices and strawberries instead? Children can learn to say ?no thanks? to a sugar-sweetened soda and to request water or skim milk instead, but those foods have to be available to them.
The six DISC clinical center sites were Kaiser Foundation Research Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Louisiana State University, New Jersey Medical College, Northwestern University, and the University of Iowa. The coordinating center was the Maryland Medical Research Institute.