By Duke Medicine News and Communications
DURHAM, N.C. – With kids heading back to school and teens
leaving for college, Duke Medicine experts say now is the time
for parents and children to discuss healthy eating habits.
For children, counting fat grams and calories isn't as
important as watching portions and making healthy choices, said
Terrill Bravender, M.D., a pediatrician with the Center for
Nutritional Disorders and Obesity at Duke
Children's Hospital and Health Center. "You don't have to
be obsessive about it. If you generally eat healthy, there is
room for some foods that aren't as healthy," he said.
To pack more nutrition into the lunchbox, Bravender
recommends that parents involve kids in the planning. "Sit down
together and talk about what they might like for lunch. If you
involve them and use some of their choices, they're more likely
to eat it," he said.
"Parents should encourage their children to eat a wide
variety of foods so that their kids do not end up eating the
same things every day. Parents should also examine their own
attitudes toward new foods. Because kids are great imitators,
parents open to trying new foods tend to have kids open to
trying new foods," Bravender added.
Children can also learn to help prepare their own lunches
and after-school snacks, Bravender said. Easy-to-make ideas
include graham crackers with peanut butter and a glass of milk;
fresh fruit with cheese cubes; a hard boiled egg with whole
grain crackers; yogurt with a sliced banana; granola bars with
milk; or tortilla chips and bean dip made without hydrogenated
oils.
Older students transitioning to college face a different
battle – total freedom and control over their food intake.
"College can present challenges as students adjust to living
away from family, negotiating new relationships and coping with
academic pressures," said Nancy Zucker, Ph.D., head of Duke's
Eating Disorders program. "The transition is especially tough
for teens with eating disorders, and individuals predisposed to
eating disorders may use food and exercise to feel control over
their life."
University life can also exacerbate social pressures to
achieve a perfect body because college students eat, sleep and
work with their peers, which presents endless opportunities to
compare oneself to others, Zucker said.
Zucker offers an interactive nutrition workshop for students
with eating issues going away to college for the first time.
The topics include navigating the world of all-you-can eat
dining halls; coping with college eating challenges; the
freshman 15; and ideas for quick and healthy meals in the
dorm.
The workshop will be offered on Wed., Aug. 2 from 11 a.m. to
12:30 p.m., and Mon., Aug. 7 from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the
Duke Eating
Disorders Program office on the third floor of Duke Clinic
(Purple Zone). For more information or to register, call Jenny
Favret at 919-668-5291.