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Healthy lunches = healthy kids

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By Julie Stefanski, Clinical Dietitian at WellSpan Health, Twitter: @foodhelp123

August is not only back to school time for many students, teachers, and parents, but it’s also Kids Eat Right Month, a celebration of the need to teach children about the importance of good nutrition.

More than 40 percent of U.S. kids bring their own food to school. In some aspects packing a lunch does give a parent control over what is consumed, but in a study of lunches packed by third and fourth graders a few years ago the meals lacked vegetables, fruits, and calcium containing foods. The lunches unfortunately had more than enough sugary treats and salted snack items.

If your go-to foods for packed lunches could be healthier, a basic place to start is to try to use more real, unprocessed food items. A meal made up of fruit snacks, a juice, a bag of chips, and a snack cake is just a bag of treats, not a good recipe for fueling their brain and body during the day. Aim for at least three different food groups on a daily basis. If you normally hit four groups good for you! And for those of you that can fit in five food groups into one meal, well you get an A++.

Reviews of packed lunches have even found several sugar sweetened beverages in a single lunch. Why not include a refillable water bottle that won’t spill? If you send water, they’ll drink it. Choose whole fruit rather than juice. Keep the soda, sports drinks, and other sugar sweetened drinks like lemonade and iced tea out of school lunch options.

Everyone needs calcium. The highest food sources in the human diet (cow’s milk, fortified plant beverages, and fish with bones) have only 30 percent of the daily value in one serving. That means that three servings need to be included every single day. If your child is not taking a calcium food or beverage along are they making up for that somewhere else in their day? Simple hearty crackers like the Triscuit type have minimal ingredients and lots of crunch. Pair with cheese cubes, sticks or string cheese for a calcium source. It’s really simple to even send a surprise by cutting out a few shapes from a cheese block with a cookie cutter. Pack an ice pack and a milk or dairy alternative supplemented with calcium and vitamin D to help your child grow as tall as they can.

Iron deficiency is the most prevalent nutrient deficiency among children. If your child likes leftovers use cold grilled chicken, low salt ham or minimally processed lunch meat, or 2 hard boiled eggs to provide a good source of iron. Beans are another easy fix for an iron boost. Pack mini packs of hummus with carrot sticks and a few pretzels for a healthy option. Elementary school children need at least 2 ounces of protein at lunch. Compare that to a high schooler trying to build muscle and there’s a big difference in nutritional needs.

Natural peanut butter is another good source of iron, but if peanut butter is not allowed, consider sunflower seed butter, golden pea or soy nut butter all made to be tolerated by individuals with peanut or tree nut allergies. Spread on whole grain crackers, banana, apple or a whole grain bread.

Many of the foods that make up packed lunches of children today didn’t even exist 30 years ago. These foods often are hidden sources of sugar that clearly most kids don’t need in the amounts they are currently eating. Start by cutting down on obvious sources of sugar at lunch such as cookies, cupcakes, and other desserts which shouldn’t be daily indulgences.

For sandwiches, limit chocolate flavored nut butters, jelly, and marshmallow since the rest of the lunch probably has another source of sugar in it.

Skip the candy treat (especially if they’re getting extra sugar later in the day) and opt for a nice note or joke for young children. Take a minute and draw half a picture on their napkin. Have kids add to the story with their own imagination. Out of time? Use a pre-made lunch note or silly napkin available online at sites like www.lunchboxnotes.com.

Consider some of these sugar swaps to help your Kid Eat Right as they head back to the classroom.

Lots of hidden sugar is hiding in:

1 pack of fruit snacks = 4.5 teaspoons

Choose instead:

Apple slices

Lots of hidden sugar is hiding in:

Sugar sweetened cereal bar = 3.5 teaspoons

Choose instead:

2 full graham cracker sheets

Lots of hidden sugar is hiding in:

Fruit filled cereal bar = 3.5 teaspoons

Choose instead:

Oat granola bar

Lots of hidden sugar is hiding in:

Some yogurt tubes = 2.5 teaspoons

Choose instead:

Greek yogurt tube

Lots of hidden sugar is hiding in:

1 small pack of chewy fruit candy = 4 teaspoons

Choose instead:

Small pack of chocolate dusted almonds

Kids Eat Right offers lots of resources including articles, infographics, videos and recipes to encourage nutritious eating among children and families. Kids Eat Right, an initiative of the Foundation of the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics, supports efforts of the White House to end the childhood obesity epidemic within a generation. To learn more visit www.KidsEatRight.org.


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