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Picky Eaters
What is a picky eater?
The peak time for picky eating is the toddler or preschool years. A picky eater:
complains about or refuses specific foods, especially vegetables and meats
pushes foods around the plate
hides foods or gives them to a pet under the table
eats enough total foods and calories per day.
What causes it?
Children of all ages (and adults) commonly have a few food dislikes. A picky
eater is a child with many food dislikes. At age 2 or 3, up to 20 percent of
children are picky eaters. It is normal for most young children to dislike foods
with a bitter or spicy taste. Sometimes children dislike foods because of their
color, but more often it's because they are difficult to chew. Children accept
tender meats better than tough ones, and well-cooked vegetables better than
raw. Occasionally a child who gags on large pieces of all foods has large tonsils
that make it difficult to swallow.
How long does it last?
Most children who are picky eaters will grow out of it. They start trying new
foods during the early school years because of peer pressure. The voracious
appetite during the teen years also increases the willingness to experiment.
If you try to force your child to eat a food he doesn't like, he may gag or
even vomit. Forced feedings always interfere with the normal pleasure of eating
and eventually decreases the appetite. Learning to accept new foods should not
be expected before the teenage years.
How can I help my child?
Try to prepare a main dish that everyone likes. Try to avoid any unusual main
dish that your child strongly dislikes. Some children don't like foods that
are mixed together, such as casseroles. Try reintroducing such dishes when your
child is older.
Allow occasional substitutes for the main dish. If your child refuses to eat
the main dish and this is an unusual request, you may allow a substitute dish.
An acceptable substitute would be breakfast cereal or a simple sandwich the
child prepares for himself. Never become a short-order cook and prepare any
extra foods for mealtime. The child should know that you expect him to learn
to eat the main dish that has been prepared for the family.
Respect any strong food dislikes. If your child has a few strong food dislikes
(especially any food that makes her gag), do not serve that food to her when
it's prepared as part of the family meal.
Don't worry about vegetables, just encourage more fruits. Because vegetables
tend to be hard to chew and some of them are bitter, they are commonly rejected
by children and even by many adults. Keep in mind that fruits and vegetables
are from the same food group. There are no essential vegetables. Vegetables
can be entirely replaced by fruits without any nutritional harm to your child.
This is not a health issue. Don't make your child feel guilty about avoiding
some vegetables.
Don't allow complaining about food at mealtimes. Have a rule that it's okay
to decline a serving of a particular food or to push it to the side of the plate.
But complaining about it is unacceptable.
Encourage your child to taste new foods. Many tastes are acquired. Your child
may eventually learn that she likes a food she initially refuses. Research shows,
it may take seeing other people eat a new food 10 times before they're even
willing to taste it, and another 10 times of tasting it before they develop
a liking for it. Don't try to rush this normal process of adapting to new foods.
Trying to force a child to eat one bite of a food per year of age is not helpful
with most picky eaters. Instead, it's better to simply serve it repeatedly,
ask your child to taste it, then trust your child when they say they have tasted
the food.
Avoid pressure or punishment at mealtime. Never pressure your child to eat all
foods. Never punish your child for refusing to take one bite of a new food.
It will only lead to liking that food less over time, gagging or even vomiting.
If your child has a stubborn, strong-willed nature, pressure around eating can
progress to a power struggle which in turn prolongs the picky eating.
Don't argue about dessert. An unnecessary area of friction for picky eaters
is a rule that if you don't clean your plate, you can't have any dessert. Since
desserts are not necessarily harmful, a better approach is to allow your child
one serving of desert regardless of what she eats. However, there are no seconds
on dessert for children who don't eat an adequate amount of the main course.
Desserts don't have to be sweets, they can be nutritious desserts such as fruit.
Don't extend mealtime. Don't keep your child sitting at the dinner table after
the rest of the family is done. This will only cause your child to develop unpleasant
associations with mealtime.
Keep the mealtime atmosphere pleasant. Make it an important family event. Draw
your children into friendly conversation. Tell them what's happened to you today
and ask about their day. Talk about fun subjects unrelated to food. Avoid making
it a time for criticism or struggle over control.
Avoid conversation about eating at any time. Don't discuss what your child eats
in your child's presence. Trust your child's appetite to look after your child's
caloric needs. Also don't give praise for appropriate eating. Don't give bribes
or rewards for meeting your eating expectations. Children should eat to satisfy
their appetite, not to please the parent. Occasionally you might praise your
child for trying a new food that he does not like the taste or texture of.
Consider giving your child a daily vitamin-mineral supplement. If your child
is not eating at least 1 serving or meat per day, give a multivitamin with iron
to prevent iron deficiency anemia. Although vitamins are probably unnecessary
for most of us, they are not harmful in normal amounts and may allow you to
be less concerned about your child's eating patterns.
When should I call my child's health care provider?
Call during office hours if:
Your child is losing weight.
Your child gags on or vomits certain foods.
Your child has heartburn.
You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam
Books.
Published by McKesson Provider Technologies.
Last modified: 2005-05-16
Last reviewed: 2005-02-21
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health
information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and educate
and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment
by a healthcare professional.
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