EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation
News imageNews imageNews imageNews imageNews image
BBC Homepagelow graphics version | feedback | help
BBC News Online
News image You are in: Health
Front Page 
World 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Medical notes 
Background Briefings 
Education 
Sport 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 

News image
News image
News imageDr Susan Jebb
"The whole pattern of children's eating has changed quite dramatically"
News image real 28k
News image
News imageThe BBC's Richard Hannaford
"Researchers say 1950s children had a better diet because they had more vitamins, minerals and fibre"
News image real 28k
News image
News imageUrsula Arens of the British Nutrition Foundation
"They ate more fat in the fifties but they were doing more exercise"
News image real 28k
News image
News image Tuesday, 30 November, 1999, 08:12 GMT
Children's diet better in 1950s
Modern children's meals are less nutritious than in the 1950s

Child nutrition in the 1950s was superior to the 1990s, according to researchers - despite the food shortages of the post-war period.

Modern children fare worse for intake of several key nutrients, including fibre, calcium, vitamins and iron.

The project looked at the diet records of 4,600 children aged four in 1950, and compared them with similar records taken in 1992.

The researchers discovered that 1950s children:
  • Ate more bread and milk, increasing their fibre and calcium intake
  • Drank few soft drinks, deriving less of their energy from sugar
  • Got most of their vitamin C from vegetables rather than juices and drinks
  • Ate more red meat, giving them more iron
  • Had more fat in their diet
In fact, the 1950s diet was almost in line with current recommendations on healthy eating for children.

Professor Michael Wadsworth, Director of the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, said that it was an indication of the complete change in children's lifestyle over the years.

He said: "In 1950, the average diet was still influenced by post-war austerity but this study shows that the food and nutrient intake of young children at the time was better than today.

"The children's higher calcium intake could have potential benefits for their bone health in later life, while their vegetable consumption may protect them against heart and respiratory disease and some forms of cancer."

Babies and children get more energy from sugar
He said that, although the fat and overall calorie intake of the 1950s child was higher, generally children were more active than their 1990s counterparts.

It is only in recent years that the problem of childhood obesity has emerged as a major public health threat.

Estimates in 1990 suggested that one in 20 children aged nine to 11 could be classified as clinically obese.

However, a string of recent smaller studies is suggesting the true rate could now be well in excess of this.

Healthy eating project

Dr Mary Rudolf, a community paediatrician from Leeds, is involved with a primary school-based project which aimed to change the eating habits of schoolchildren.

This project discovered that a massive 14% of children in this age group were obese.

She said: "It's so difficult to tackle adult obesity, so the only option is to take preventive measures in childhood."

Senior lecturer in dietetics at the University of Leeds, Pinki Sahota, said that the project had encouraged schools to make changes to their meals, and introduce both more exercise and healthy eating advice into the curriculum.

"Obesity is a real public health issue," she said. "We need to educate people to make healthier eating choices."

Although obese children do not suffer huge health problems while in childhood, except perhaps for those caused by the overloading of the joints, being obese greatly increases the risk of developing coronary heart disease.

News image
News imageSearch BBC News Online
News image
News image
News imageNews image
Advanced search options
News image
Launch console
News image
News image
News imageBBC RADIO NEWS
News image
News image
News imageBBC ONE TV NEWS
News image
News image
News imageWORLD NEWS SUMMARY
News image
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews imageNews imageNews imagePROGRAMMES GUIDE
News imageNews image

See also:
News image
News image 26 Nov 99 |  UK
News image Is British cooking still a dog's dinner?
News image
News image 30 Jun 99 |  Health
News image Report to blast child health policy
News image
News image 24 Oct 99 |  Health
News image Starved babies 'become obese adults'
News image
News imageNews image

Internet links:
News image
News image
News image
News image
News image
News image
News image

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
News image
Links to other Health stories are at the foot of the page.
News image
News image
E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Health stories



News imageNews image