Related Links

Featured Links

Recommended Sites
Healthy Eating Links





Quote of the Day

"Humor is the great thing, the saving thing. The minute it crops up, all our irritation and resentments slip away, and a sunny spirit takes their place."








 


 
 
Featured Healthy Eating Articles

Are Your Kids Sabotaging Your Weight Loss?
If you are a mom at home on a diet, you will probably related to a frequent situation I encounter as a weight loss consultant. Many of my clients with children are able to keep to a healthy eating plan through most circumstances except two. It all starts ...

Homeopathy – Five Things to Know before You 'Go There'
With natural health care so popular, an area that has shown incredible growth is that of homeopathic medicine. But, although you can find homeopathic remedies on health food store shelves, are you really clear on what a homeopathic specialist is and what ...

New Year's Diet Resolution Tips
For many people, the coming New Year will involve resolutions to get on a diet and lose weight. While slimming down is one of the most popular New Year's resolutions, it is often easier said than done. Making the switch from the calorie and fat laden ...

How To Help Your Overweight Child
 

Be supportive

• Tell your child that he or she is loved, is special, and is important. Children's feelings about themselves often are based on their parents' feelings about them.

• Accept your child at any weight. Children will be more likely to accept and feel good about themselves when their parents accept them.

• Listen to your child's concerns about his or her weight. Overweight children probably know better than anyone else that they have a weight problem. They need support, understanding, and encouragement from parents.

Encourage healthy eating habits

• Buy and serve more fruits and vegetables (fresh, frozen, or canned). Let your child choose them at the store.

• Buy fewer soft drinks and high fat/high calorie snack foods like chips, cookies, and candy. These snacks are OK once in a while, but keep healthy snack foods on hand too and offer them to your child more often.

• Eat breakfast every day. Skipping breakfast can leave your child hungry, tired, and looking for less healthy foods later in the day.

• Plan healthy meals and eat together as a family. Eating together at meal times helps children learn to enjoy a variety of foods.

• Eat fast food less often. When you visit a fast food restaurant, try the healthful options offered.

• Offer your child water or low-fat milk more often than fruit juice. Fruit juice is a healthy choice but is high in calories.

• Do not get discouraged if your child will not eat a new food the first time it is served. Some kids will need to have a new food served to them 10 times or more before they will eat it.

• Try not to use food as a reward when encouraging kids to eat. Promising dessert to a child for eating vegetables, for example, sends the message that vegetables are less valuable than dessert. Kids learn to dislike foods they think are less valuable.

• Start with small servings and let your child ask for more if he or she is still hungry. It is up to you to provide your child with healthy meals and snacks, but your child should be allowed to choose how much food he or she will eat.

Healthy snack foods for your child to try:

o Fresh fruit

o Fruit canned in juice or light syrup

o Small amounts of dried fruits such as raisins, apple rings, or apricots

o Fresh vegetables such as baby carrots, cucumber, zucchini, or tomatoes

o Reduced fat cheese or a small amount of peanut butter on whole-wheat crackers

o Low-fat yogurt with fruit

Foods that are small, round, sticky, or hard to chew, such as raisins, whole grapes, hard vegetables, hard chunks of cheese, nuts, seeds, and popcorn can cause choking in children under age 4. You can still prepare some of these foods for young children, for example, by cutting grapes into small pieces and cooking and cutting up vegetables. Always watch your toddler during meals and snacks.

Encourage daily physical activity

Like adults, kids need daily physical activity. Here are some ways to help your child move every day:

• Set a good example. If your children see that you are physically active and have fun, they are more likely to be active and stay active throughout their lives.

• Encourage your child to join a sports team or class, such as soccer, dance, basketball, or gymnastics at school or at your local community or recreation center.

• Be sensitive to your child's needs. If your child feels uncomfortable participating in activities like sports, help him or her find physical activities that are fun and not embarrassing.

• Be active together as a family. Assign active chores such as making the beds, washing the car, or vacuuming. Plan active outings such as a trip to the zoo or a walk through a local park.

• Because his or her body is not ready yet, do not encourage your pre-adolescent child to participate in adult-style physical activity such as long jogs, using an exercise bike or treadmill, or lifting heavy weights. FUN physical activities are best for kids.

• Kids need a total of about 60 minutes of physical activity a day, but this does not have to be all at one time. Short 10- or even 5-minute bouts of activity throughout the day are just as good. If your children are not used to being active, encourage them to start with what they can do and build up to 60 minutes a day.



About the Author
Kim Beardsmore is a weight loss consultant. Tons of recipes, articles, free ezine, meal plans and resources to help you lose weight through excellence in nutrition. Estimate your healthy weight, free newsletter and more at http://www.weight-loss-health.com.au


Google
Healthy Eating News

Mass. wants calorie counts at fast-food outlets - Philadelphia Inquirer
BOSTON - Massachusetts health officials plan to follow the lead of New York City and California in requiring fast-food chains to post calorie counts for their products on boards behind the order counter. That is one of several proposals in a healthy ...

Showing entries for Category: Food-for-Healthy-Families - San Francisco Examiner
This is a saying we would all be wise to remember. As a parent, we have a huge impact on the habits our children develop. One of the most important areas we can influence them is in their eating habits; to help them develop healthy, lifelong eating ...

Smooth over holiday eating with healthy drinking - Morning Journal
No comments posted. December holidays leave us measuring the festive fun by the number of empty cookie tins and foiled ham wrappers that fill their trash bins and have some of us measuring our waistlines. If turning the page on the calendar means ...

City health chief's food fight targets meat - Chicago Tribune
Chicago health commissioner Dr. Terry Mason has a message for Chicagoans who enjoy devouring meat in all its fat-dripping, artery-clogging glory: Don't do it. As part of his campaign to slim down waists and lower blood pressure, blood sugar and ...

Nell knows good food - Edinburgh News
WOLFING down a potato scone and mushroom buttie, slathered in tomato sauce, is perhaps not the best preparation to meet Nell Nelson. It should probably have been a breakfast of wholegrain cereals, or porridge sprinkled with fresh fruit. "Oh well ...

Getting healthy is presentation's goal - Houma Courier
If you have ever made the New Year’s resolution — “I am going to go on a­ diet now that the holidays are over,” but didn’t fulfill your mission, this presentation might be just for you. “Getting Back on the Healthy Track” will be ...

Fort Campbell to expand medical facilities - Leaf Chronicle
Over the next two years, Fort Campbell's medical facilities will grow and expand dramatically, with the addition of more clinics and renovations and all-new buildings. "The flood gates have opened and there's a lot of projects going on," said Dave ...