Many parents find that they have difficulty convincing their children to consume one of life's most basic essentials: water.
Though of course, it's not that kids truly hate water. No thirsty person
hates water. It's that kids much prefer drinking juice, sports drinks
or even soda.
Related: Water is the new gold
"I stupidly went down the juice-as-a-main-beverage path," one L.A.-based
mother of a two-year-old told Yahoo! Shine, "and now C. thinks water is
the devil's juice."
"Especially when my children were little, they never wanted to drink water," mom and blogger Lisa Cain of Snack Girl
told Yahoo! Shine. "And you're watching your kid running around
thinking, 'They're thirsty, they need something to drink!' And they're
so headstrong at that age. So you give them juice."
"One of the biggest challenges parents face is trying to get kids to
drink water early on," says Dr. TJ Gold, a pediatrician at New York City
based Tribeca Pediatrics.
Juice, sports drinks or sodas generally taste better and are more
interesting and appealing to children than water, so that's what the
kids insist on drinking, and parents cave in.
Kids, however, need plain, old-fashioned water. "With rates of childhood
obesity at an all-time high, kids not drinking enough water is a
definite concern," says Angela Lemond, a dietician and spokeswoman for Eat Right, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
Kids get thirsty, they're going to drink something. And if it's not
water, it's usually a sugar-sweetened beverage. These--including most
fruit juices--are a major source of calories and have been proven to
contribute to obesity in teens. Even 100 percent juice is packed with
natural sugars and calories and should be avoided except as a treat,
pediatricians and health experts say.
So, how much water is enough, and how can parents convince their kids to drink it?
Pediatrician Gold says that as a rule of thumb, children should be
drinking an ounce of water per pound of body-weight per day. For a
40-pound child, that's 5 glasses of water a day (which, if you're a
parent of a small child, you probably realize is wildly optimistic).
Related: Protein overload: Too much of a good thing?
Children under 1 year of age should primarily be drinking milk, and some
nutritionists say that children under one don't need water at all.
However, Gold says that starting to introduce water in a special,
designated sippy cup at the same time solid food is introduced will get
kids used to the healthy habit. And watering down juice isn't the
answer. "Parents promise, 'It's just a splash of juice in the water,
they'll drink so much more that way," says Gold. "But the next time you
see them, it's a lot more than a splash."
By Valerie Isakova, Shine Parenting Editor | Team Mom – Fri, Jul 27, 2012 10:06 AM EDT
This summer Kids and Adults need to drink lots of water in Trinidad and Tobago.
For more info visit.http://shine.yahoo.com/team-mom/daily-essential-kids-arent-getting-enough-140600636.html
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