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No Low-fat Diet for Baby
Fat Performs Essential Functions for Infants and Toddlers
By Sheila Seifert
Three months old and already 17 pounds, Steven Nelson was diagnosed as consuming too many fats. "I was 22 at the time and blindly did what I was told," says his mother, Melony Churchman of Alvarado, Texas. "The doctor removed Steven from his all-formula diet and put him on a low-fat diet. When I introduced solid foods to him a month later, my doctor advised me to water down his cereal and feed him smaller portions. By 9 months, Steven could not sit alone, crawl, speak or do anything that most 9-month-olds do."
Steven's doctor equated the nutritional needs of a growing child to those of an adult. In the same way, caring parents daily place their infants and toddlers on the same high-fiber, low-fat diets that keep adult hearts healthy and bodies trim. Unfortunately this non-scientific trend has put American infants and toddlers at risk. A child's dietary needs are different than those of adults.
Fortunately, in the case of Steven, a pediatric intern told Churchman that his motor and speech skills were underdeveloped because Steven's brain was not getting the fat it needed. He was put in physical therapy and on a high-fat diet. Today, 13 years later, he is an honor student and a point guard on his basketball team.
Steven's case is not an isolated incident. A 36-year-old mother of two in Kansas City recently lost 60 pounds on a low-fat diet. Not wanting her 2- and 6-year-old children to struggle with weight as she had or acquire a taste for fat, she immediately put them on two-percent milk and a low-fat diet.
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