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Many camps look for innovative, fun, tasty ways to provide
healthy choices and decision-making skills to their campers
and staff. Parents can adapt these tips to promote healthy
eating and enjoy the results along with their children. Watch
what happens when you:
- Teach your children to alter food preferences by giving
them good choices
- Serve only green leaf (or other dark green versus
iceberg lettuce).
- Serve whole wheat bread items in place of white (i.e.,
hamburger buns).
- Serve all sauces, dressings, and gravies on the side.
- Make fresh vegetables and dips available in colorful
arrays.
- Offer whole wheat or graham crackers instead of chips.
- Offer taste tests, expose your children to new foods.
For example . . . .
- Make kiwi the "fruit of the day" by providing your
child with a half kiwi and a spoon.
- Serve slices of jicama and cookie cutters at the
table for your child to make edible shapes.
- Provide frilly toothpicks for eating Gardenburgers
or other new items.
- Offer a dinner table contest, giving points for numbers
of spinach leaves consumed.
- Provide an array of "Guess what it is" taste-testing
food items.
- Encourage eating breakfast
- Studies show children perform better in school and
at play.
- A healthy breakfast is a good deterrent for overeating
at lunch.
- Those who skip breakfast have more problems with
weight control.
- Introduce a new exercise or activity program
- Consider enrolling your child in a dance/ethnic dance/movement
program.
- Offer your child the opportunity to try a new sport.
- Promote a "5-a-Day Summer Club" at home
- Offer different colored fruits and vegetable pieces
and toothpicks so your child can build a fruit animal
shape or vegetable creation, and then eat it.
- Display a poster in your kitchen to track 5-a-day
foods.
- Offer points for healthy eating choices.
- Reduce "fast food" and junk food for snacks and side
dishes (chips, cookies, candy, etc.)
- Replace chips at meals with soy crisps or home-made
potato dishes.
- Have a "make your own trail mix" party, providing
healthy choices (dried banana or other fruit chips,
nuts, raisins, Cheerios, sunflower seeds, coconut flakes,
toasted oatmeal or granola, carob chips).
Camps play a vital role in addressing the obesity epidemic
but so can you. Children need to be given the opportunity
to start and practice good nutritious habits both at home
and at camp. Camp is a great place to offer good food, great
activities, a positive environment, a safe and secure location,
and most of all, fun.
| Books That Teach Healthy Food Choices
for Children |
| Healthy Snacks for Kids, Penny
Warner, Bristol Publishing Enterprises, Inc., San Leandro,
California, 1996. |
| 365 Foods Kids Love To Eat,
Sheila Ellison and Judith Gray, Sourcebooks, Inc., Naperville,
IL, 1995. |
| How To Teach Nutrition To Kids,
Connie Liakos Evers, M.S., R.D., 24 Carrot Press, Portland,
OR, 2003. www.nutritionforkids.com |
| Healthy Food for Health Kids,
Bridget Swinney, M.S., R.D., Meadowbrook Press, Minnetonka,
MN, 1999. |
| American Dietetic Association
Guide to Healthy Eating For Kids, Jodie Sheild, Med,
R.D., and Mary Catherine Mullen, M.S., RD, John Wiley
& Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ, 2002. |
| Quick Meals for Healthy Kids and
Busy Parents, Sandra K. Nissenberg, M.S., RD, Margaret
L. Bogle, Ph.D., RD, Audrey C. Wright, M.S., RD, John
Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, NY, 1995. |
| The Book of Children's Foods,
Lorna Rhodes, Berkley Publishing Group, New York, NY,
1992. |
| Stats |
| 1 in 5 children (10 million children)
are obese. |
| It is now common place for children
as young as 4 years of age to have type II diabetes, previously
considered an adult problem generally related to obesity. |
| 20 percent of children do not get
2 hours of vigorous exercise per week. |
| Less than 12 percent of children
eat recommended fruit. |
| Take-out food accounts for more
than 30 percent of a family’s food expenditures
on a daily, weekly or annual basis, across all spectrums
of socioeconomic classes. |
| Obesity contributes to 300,000 deaths
per year. |
| Less than 12 percent of high school
students eat the recommended amount of fruit. |
| Less than 12 percent of young women
get enough milk. |
| Sources: United States Department
of Agriculture, National Institutes of Health, and Centers
for Disease Control. |
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