Children who skip main meals are more likely to have excess body fat and
an increased cardiometabolic risk already at the age of 6 to 8 years,
according to a Finnish study. A higher consumption of sugary drinks, red
meat and low-fat margarine and a lower consumption of vegetable oil are
also related to a higher cardiometabolic risk. "The more of these
factors are present, the higher the risk," says Ms Aino-Maija Eloranta,
MHSc, who presented the results in her doctoral thesis at the University
of Eastern Finland.
The dietary habits, eating behaviour and dietary determinants of
excess body adiposity and cardiometabolic risk were investigated in a
population sample of 512 Finnish girls and boys 6 to 8 years of age
participating in the Physical Activity and Nutrition in Children (PANIC)
Study. Cardiometabolic risk was assessed by a continuous metabolic risk
score computed using Z-scores of waist circumference, fasting serum
insulin, fasting plasma glucose, triglycerides and high-density
lipoprotein cholesterol and the mean of systolic and diastolic blood
pressure.
Children who skipped meals and ate more protein were more likely to
have excess body fat. Uncontrolled eating behaviour, such as eating
fast, emotional overeating and a lower satiety responsiveness were also
associated with higher body adiposity.
The study also showed that most children's diet was far from ideal.
Less than half of the children ate all three main meals -- breakfast,
lunch and dinner -- every day. Instead, snacks were a major source of
energy and sucrose. A minority of the children consumed vegetables,
fruit and berries as recommended. As many as a quarter of the children
consumed sugary drinks daily.. The intakes of saturated fat, sucrose and
salt were higher and the intakes of dietary fibre, vitamin D and iron
were lower than recommended among the children.
"Based on the findings, sticking to regular meals seems to be crucial
for preventing overweight and cardiometabolic diseases already in
childhood," Ms Eloranta says. In addition, parents need to provide their
children with better dietary choices: regular-fat vegetable-oil
margarines and vegetable oils instead of low-fat margarines, fat-free
milk and water instead of sugary drinks, and more fish instead of red
meat at meals.
The results were originally published in European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, International Journal of Obesity and European Journal of Nutrition.
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