Restricting how much your 1-year-old eats may result in a lower weight at age
2. While this result may seem obvious, this finding of a study published
in the January 2008 issue of Pediatrics, actually contradicts many earlier pediatric research studies.
"These results were surprising because a great deal of previous research has shown that the use of restriction when feeding children predicts that children want to eat more of the restricted food, and that they subsequently gain more weight," says study co-author Dr. Claire Farrow, lecturer at Loughborough University, Leicestershire, England, in the Centre for Research into Eating Disorders.
"Children are born with the instinctive ability to manage their weight by eating when they're hungry and stopping when they're full." |
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"Research around the world has repeatedly shown that when children are older (e.g. 5 years plus) and they are exposed to restrictive feeding practices, they tend to interfere with the child's internal regulation of their hunger and satiety and to predict that the child is more likely to eat when s/he is not hungry," Dr. Farrow says. "Children who are exposed to restriction also tend to prefer to eat those foods that have been restricted, and are likely to gain more weight in the longer term. So restriction really is not an adaptive parental feeding strategy."
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