Children on vegan and vegetarian diets should eat three portions of protein foods a day in order to get enough iron and zinc, nutritionists suggest.
On Thursday, the (BNF) issued new guidance on what toddlers should eat to stay healthy, including advice on portion sizes and the importance of limiting sugary cereals, salty crisps and fruit juice.
The organisation’s experts say that while vegan and vegetarian diets can be healthy for young children, parents are advised to visit a GP to ask for advice about supplementation of key nutrients.
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“It can be difficult for young children to get enough vitamin A and B12, riboflavin, iron, zinc, calcium and iodine,” the organisation states.
Its experts advise serving children on such diets three portions a day from the “protein foods” group, which includes houmous, cooked kidney beans, and peanut butter on bread or toast.
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1/13 Miley Cyrus
The pop singer is a passionate animal rights advocate, telling Vanity Fair in 2019 that her diet also reflects her fashion choices: “I’m challenging the system more than ever. Choosing to live as a sustainable vegan activist means wearing more vintage (less waste; loving pieces for longer), playing with the newest eco-materials and technology, and making custom vegan pieces with some of my favorite designers.”
AFP/Getty Images
2/13 Alicia Silverstone
The Clueless star went vegan shortly after wrapping the hit 1990s film and has been a passionate campaigner for animal rights since. Speaking in a video for Compassionate Meals in 2017, she said: “Knowing the truth about where our food comes from is just so disturbing to me. Once you see it, there’s no way to go back from that for me.”
Getty Images
3/13 Simon Cowell
The music mogul revealed in a recent interview with The Sun that he decided to give up animal products earlier this year “on a whim”, adding that he feels much better as a result.
Getty Images
4/13 Venus Williams
“I started for health reasons,” Williams told Health in 2019. “I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease, and I wanted to maintain my performance on the court. Once I started I fell in love with the concept of fueling your body in the best way possible. Not only does it help me on the court, but I feel like I’m doing the right thing for me.”
Getty
5/13 Natalie Portman
The American-Israeli actor decided to go vegan eight years ago after learning more about the environmental consequences of eating animal products. Speaking at an Environmental Media Awards benefit, 2017, she said: “Factory farming is responsible for most of the air, water, and land pollution – that disproportionately affects our poor communities as well. So we get to make decisions three times a day, what we do with our planet, and you can make a difference by even once a day or once a week choosing not to eat animals or animal products.”
AFP/Getty Images
6/13 Beyoncé
While she chooses to refer to herself as plant-based as opposed to vegan, the ‘Halo’ singer underwent a 22-day vegan challenge with husband Jay-Z in 2013 and is believed to have maintained the diet ever since. Writing in the foreword of The Greenprint: Plant-Based Diet, Best Body, Better World by Marco Borges, the couple say: “We used to think of health as a diet – some worked for us, some didn’t. Once we looked at health as the truth, instead of a diet, it became a mission for us to share that truth and lifestyle with as many people as possible.”
Getty Images for Coachella
7/13 David Haye
The British boxer extolled the virtues of veganism in an interview with The Daily Telegraph in 2016: “A lot of the meat that people eat has been genetically modified, or if it hasn’t then the food the animal’s been fed has been. That’s tough for a human being to process, so cutting it out made me feel immediately better and stronger than ever.”
Getty Images
8/13 Ariana Grande
The ‘Dangerous Woman’ singer announced she was going vegan in November 2018. Speaking to The Daily Mirror in a recent interview, she explained: “A lot of the meat that people eat has been genetically modified, or if it hasn’t then the food the animal’s been fed has been. That’s tough for a human being to process, so cutting it out made me feel immediately better and stronger than ever.”
AFP/Getty Images
9/13 Ellie Goulding
The British singer has been toying with veganism for a while, having been a vegetarian for seven years. Speaking to The Cut in 2018, she revealed that she will “never eat fish or meat again” and eats a predominantly vegan diet.
Getty Images
10/13 Mike Tyson
The former heavyweight boxing champion revealed he had become vegan in 2010. “I wish I was born this way,” he told Fox News in 2011. “When you find out about the processed stuff you have been eating. I wonder why I was crazy all those years.”
Getty Images
11/13 Jessica Chastain
The Zero Dark Thirty star decided to go vegan roughly 13 years ago because of low energy. Speaking to W Magazine in 2017, she clarified: “being vegan was not anything I ever wanted to be. I just really was listening to what my body was telling me.”
Getty Images
12/13 Rooney Mara
Mara has been vegan for eight years, telling Harper’s Bazaar in 2018 “it’s better for your health and the environment.”
Getty Images
13/13
Reality star Kim Kardashian West revealed that she has started eating a plant-based diet on Instagram in April 2019. Sharing two photographs of vegan dishes on her Instagram story, the 38-year-old wrote: “I am eating all plant-based when I am at home.”
Getty
1/13 Miley Cyrus
The pop singer is a passionate animal rights advocate, telling Vanity Fair in 2019 that her diet also reflects her fashion choices: “I’m challenging the system more than ever. Choosing to live as a sustainable vegan activist means wearing more vintage (less waste; loving pieces for longer), playing with the newest eco-materials and technology, and making custom vegan pieces with some of my favorite designers.”
AFP/Getty Images
2/13 Alicia Silverstone
The Clueless star went vegan shortly after wrapping the hit 1990s film and has been a passionate campaigner for animal rights since. Speaking in a video for Compassionate Meals in 2017, she said: “Knowing the truth about where our food comes from is just so disturbing to me. Once you see it, there’s no way to go back from that for me.”
Getty Images
3/13 Simon Cowell
The music mogul revealed in a recent interview with The Sun that he decided to give up animal products earlier this year “on a whim”, adding that he feels much better as a result.
Getty Images
4/13 Venus Williams
“I started for health reasons,” Williams told Health in 2019. “I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease, and I wanted to maintain my performance on the court. Once I started I fell in love with the concept of fueling your body in the best way possible. Not only does it help me on the court, but I feel like I’m doing the right thing for me.”
Getty
5/13 Natalie Portman
The American-Israeli actor decided to go vegan eight years ago after learning more about the environmental consequences of eating animal products. Speaking at an Environmental Media Awards benefit, 2017, she said: “Factory farming is responsible for most of the air, water, and land pollution – that disproportionately affects our poor communities as well. So we get to make decisions three times a day, what we do with our planet, and you can make a difference by even once a day or once a week choosing not to eat animals or animal products.”
AFP/Getty Images
6/13 Beyoncé
While she chooses to refer to herself as plant-based as opposed to vegan, the ‘Halo’ singer underwent a 22-day vegan challenge with husband Jay-Z in 2013 and is believed to have maintained the diet ever since. Writing in the foreword of The Greenprint: Plant-Based Diet, Best Body, Better World by Marco Borges, the couple say: “We used to think of health as a diet – some worked for us, some didn’t. Once we looked at health as the truth, instead of a diet, it became a mission for us to share that truth and lifestyle with as many people as possible.”
Getty Images for Coachella
7/13 David Haye
The British boxer extolled the virtues of veganism in an interview with The Daily Telegraph in 2016: “A lot of the meat that people eat has been genetically modified, or if it hasn’t then the food the animal’s been fed has been. That’s tough for a human being to process, so cutting it out made me feel immediately better and stronger than ever.”
Getty Images
8/13 Ariana Grande
The ‘Dangerous Woman’ singer announced she was going vegan in November 2018. Speaking to The Daily Mirror in a recent interview, she explained: “A lot of the meat that people eat has been genetically modified, or if it hasn’t then the food the animal’s been fed has been. That’s tough for a human being to process, so cutting it out made me feel immediately better and stronger than ever.”
AFP/Getty Images
9/13 Ellie Goulding
The British singer has been toying with veganism for a while, having been a vegetarian for seven years. Speaking to The Cut in 2018, she revealed that she will “never eat fish or meat again” and eats a predominantly vegan diet.
Getty Images
10/13 Mike Tyson
The former heavyweight boxing champion revealed he had become vegan in 2010. “I wish I was born this way,” he told Fox News in 2011. “When you find out about the processed stuff you have been eating. I wonder why I was crazy all those years.”
Getty Images
11/13 Jessica Chastain
The Zero Dark Thirty star decided to go vegan roughly 13 years ago because of low energy. Speaking to W Magazine in 2017, she clarified: “being vegan was not anything I ever wanted to be. I just really was listening to what my body was telling me.”
Getty Images
12/13 Rooney Mara
Mara has been vegan for eight years, telling Harper’s Bazaar in 2018 “it’s better for your health and the environment.”
Getty Images
13/13
Reality star Kim Kardashian West revealed that she has started eating a plant-based diet on Instagram in April 2019. Sharing two photographs of vegan dishes on her Instagram story, the 38-year-old wrote: “I am eating all plant-based when I am at home.”
Getty
Sara Stanner, science director at the BNF, says families making the decision to adopt vegetarian or vegan diets “need to be aware of how to balance their diet, and use supplements if needed in order to ensure children get all the nutrients they need to be healthy”.
The new 5532 guide has been developed by nutrition scientists and an advisory group of experts in early years’ nutrition.
While milk is described as a “good choice for drinks”, as it provides calcium and other important nutrients, the guidance also recommends parents seek medical advice on supplementation if they are not offering dairy foods to their children.
As for children aged six months to five years – including those who are breast fed or consuming less than 500ml of formula milk per day – the BNF suggests parents give them supplements of vitamins A, C, and D.
Children under the age of two are advised to drink whole milk but experts say they can move to semi-skimmed milk after this age if they are eating well.
However, skimmed or one per cent milk is said not to be suitable as a main drink for children under five and children should not be given tea or coffee due to its caffeine content.
It is also suggested that children aged one to four consume five portions a day of starchy foods such as bread, cereal, potatoes, pasta and bread sticks.
Children are also advised to eat five or more portions of fruit and vegetables, three portions of dairy foods and two portions of protein such as eggs, chickpeas or dahl (non-vegan and vegetarian diets).
Details are also included on what constitutes a single portion in the guide.
For example, one portion of pasta is stated as being the equivalent to two to five tablespoons, according to the experts, while a slice of bread is one portion, and a portion of dairy is one cheese ball or two to four tablespoons of grated cheddar.
As for giving children sugar, parents are urged to limit high-sugar cereals, fizzy and sugary drinks, and to choose unsweetened dairy foods, such as plain yoghurt, where possible.
While fruit juices are said to provide “some important vitamins”, the BNF says that they are also high in sugar and acidic for teeth. As a result, they should only be consumed at mealtimes and should be diluted.
The organisation also say that cakes, biscuits, sweets and chocolate should not form a regular part of children’s diet.
Stanner explains: “Even when parents know which foods are part of a healthy diet, it can sometimes be difficult to know what sized portion is suitable for a young child, and how often they should be eating from the different food groups each day.
“We know that many parents are very concerned about sugar, and our guide highlights that sugary drinks and sugary treats like biscuits, chocolate and sweets shouldn’t be a regular part of children’s diets.
The expert advises parents to check food labels and to look for lower sugar options when choosing foods like breakfast cereals or yoghurts.
When it comes to choose providing children with snacks, the BNF recommends two to three healthy options per day such as vegetable sticks, fruit, cheese and crackers or toast fingers with cream cheese.
As most young children aren’t able to regulate their own appetite, the organisation advises parents to “encourage them to eat but don’t force them or expect them to eat if they are not hungry”.
The guidance states: “Some children eat slowly, but generally will have eaten all they are likely to eat within 20-30 minutes so meals don’t need to be longer than this.”
The BNF also notes that children should be physically active for at least three hours over the course of a day – this can include rolling and playing on the floor, playing in the park or dancing.
The guidance comes months after Leeds was announced as the first city in the UK to report a reduction in childhood obesity following the introduction of mass parenting lessons on how to be stricter.
The city-wide initiative, which saw parents follow an eight-week programme on how to “take charge” and set boundaries for their children, has been linked to a significant drop in obesity levels.
In light of the initiative, a new study by Oxford University revealed that while obesity rates among five-year-olds in England remained unchanged between 2013-4 and 2016-7, at around 9.4 per cent, rates in Leeds dropped to 8.8 per cent over the same period.
The data comes from the National Child Measurement Programme (NCMP), which requires all children to be weighed at the start and end of primary school.