Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: calcium kids + kids + 245  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


Calgary Herald
Banish junk from summer snacking
Calgary Herald,  Canada -
While adults typically slim down during summer, kids tend to gain weight. Researchers at Ohio State and Indiana universities both found kids' body mass ...

HealthJockey.com
Study Says It's Not Too Late for Kids to Strengthen Bones
FOXBusiness - Aug 2, 2008
"We need to take calcium and vitamin D in children's diets very seriously. Otherwise, we're looking at a weak generation of kids, and this shouldn't be ...
Calcium May Improve Kids' Bone Oneindia
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TopNews
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HealthNewsDigest.com
Boning Up and Heading Back to School
HealthNewsDigest.com, NY -
By choosing to bring foods into the home that are both rich calcium and enhanced with prebiotics, parents can ensure their kids are on the road to a ...
Give kids healthy options for school lunches
News-Leader.com, MO - Aug 4, 2008
Dried fruit can be a good alternative and yogurt and cheese are great calcium options," said Roberts. "Keep in mind that kids like to trade their food so ...
Europe gets an appetite for Food Dudes? lessons in healthy eating WalesOnline
all 6 news articles »
School rules: tips for parents
Kentucky.com, KY -
Pull-apart string cheese is fun for children and is packed with calcium. ■ Kids love ?little trees.? To make cauliflower a vivid yellow, saute it briefly ...
Do Filipinos drink milk?
Manila Standard Today, Philippines -
Parents mistakenly believe that their kids already get enough nutrition from eating rice. ?Sadly,? explains Corazon Cerdena, who conducted the FNRI study, ...

Los Angeles Times
Thanks for proving it but ... didn't we know this?
Los Angeles Times, CA - Aug 1, 2008
Researchers at the University of South Carolina and Pennsylvania State University looked at a bunch of studies of kids and calcium intake and found that, ...
Keep nutrition in mind when packing school lunches
Montgomery Advertiser, AL - Aug 3, 2008
Mom and Southeast United Dairy Industry Association Inc. registered dietitian Mary Martin Nordness said she knows kids and teens are not consuming enough ...
Frequent fractures in kids may signal serious illness
Calgary Herald,  Canada - Jul 10, 2008
One glass of milk provides close to 100 IU of vitamin D and 315 mg of calcium. The daily calcium needs in children vary by age and gender. ...
BODY BALANCE: Healthy eating during the school year
Lake Expo, MO - Aug 2, 2008
Healthy eating is important for keeping kids energized for learning and playing. Here are things to remember about healthy eating during the school year. ...
Source: Google News

Relationship between long-term calcium intake and bone mineral content of children aged from birth … -
WTK Lee, SSF Leung, SSH Lui, J Lau - British Journal of Nutrition, 2007 - Cambridge Univ Press
... 24 1 16.6% Fig 1 Sources of dietary calcium in 128 Hong Kong children at ... Fig. 2.
Distribution of calcium intake in 128 Hoiig Kong children at 5 years of age. ...

Effect of vitamin D and calcium on bone mineral density in children with CP and epilepsy in full- … -
M Jekovec-Vrhovsek, A Kocijancic, J Prezelj - Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2000 - Blackwell Synergy
... diet on vitamin D and calcium metabolism in ... bone metabolism in severely handicapped
children and young ... Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research 245: 297?302 ...

Plasma calcium-oxalate saturation in children with renal insufficiency and in children with primary … -
B Hoppe, MJ Kemper, A Bokenkamp, CB Langman - Kidney International, 1998 - pt.wkhealth.com
... of glomerular filtration rate in children derived from ... calcium oxalate monohydrate
and calcium hydrogenphosphate dihydrate ... Ann Chim 75:245-251, 1985 [Context ...

Diet and blood pressure in children and adolescents -
DG Simons-Morton, E Obarzanek - Pediatric Nephrology, 1997 - Springer
... Arch Environ Health 37:236?245 16 ... pressure and excretion of sodium, potassium, calcium
and mag ... to dietary sodium restriction in healthy normotensive children. ...

A physiologically based kinetic model for lead in children and adults. -
EJ O'Flaherty - Environmental Health Perspectives, 1998 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... 1996 Oct;33(2):235?245. [PubMed]; Pounds JG, Leggett RW. ... Developmental changes
in calcium kinetics in children assessed using stable isotopes. ...

Bone Mass in Prepubertal Children: Gender Differences and the Role of Physical Activity and Sunlight … -
G Jones, T Dwyer - Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1998 - Endocrine Soc
... 1997 Calcium-enriched foods and bone mass growth in ... of bone metabolism in severely
handicapped children and young ... 245:297?302.[Medline]; Reiter EO, Brugman SM ...

Iron deficiency associated with higher blood lead in children living in contaminated environments. -
A Bradman, B Eskenazi, P Sutton, M Athanasoulis, … - Environmental Health Perspectives, 2001 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... 1986;58(3):245?247. [PubMed]; Mahaffey KR, Gartside PS, Glueck CJ. Blood lead levels
and dietary calcium intake in 1- to 11-year-old children: the Second ...

Vitamin D receptor Fok1 polymorphism and blood lead concentration in children. -
EN Haynes, HJ Kalkwarf, R Hornung, R Wenstrup, K … - Environmental Health Perspectives, 2003 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... and VDR -Fok1 genotype was determined in 245 children. ... D receptor gene Fok1 polymorphism
predicts calcium absorption and bone mineral density in children. ...

A randomized double-blind controlled calcium supplementation trial, and bone height acquisition in … -
WTK Lee, SSF Leung, DY Leung, HSY Tsang, J Lau, … - British Journal of Nutrition, 2007 - Cambridge Univ Press
... and that pre-school children from mainland China with a mean habitual Ca intake
of 245 mg/d had ... Calcium supplementation The study children were randomly ...

Nutritional Content of Foods Advertised During the Television Programs Children Watch Most -
K Harrison, AL Marske - American Journal of Public Health, 2005 - Am Public Health Assoc
... fall short of RDVs of fiber, vitamin A, vitamin C, calcium, and iron ... Signorielli
N, Lears M. Television and children?s conceptions of nutrition ... 1992;4:245?257 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Calcium is critical — especially for kids

  No one disputes that calcium is essential for building strong bones and teeth. Women need it. Men need it. Children need it. In fact, while the message about osteoporosis prevention and bone strength seems directed at older women, it is even more important to bolster calcium intake during childhood and adolescence, when there is rapid and significant bone growth, than it is when we are older and losing bone mass.

"We're building bone mass between age 9 and 18. Ninety percent of it develops before age 20 and the rest by age 30," says Tamara Swett, clinical nutritionist at The Regional Center for Health at Stamford Hospital in Connecticut. "What you build up then is most important because after that we can't build more bone mass. After 30, we take in calcium just to maintain" the bone strength we have.

 

That makes it critically important to begin a diet high in calcium as children and continue it throughout our lives.

Unfortunately, national data indicate that most American children older than 8 don't get enough calcium, leaving them at risk for fractures or for developing osteoporosis in adulthood. A recent report by the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended that doctors evaluate children for calcium intake three times during childhood — at ages 2-3, 8-9 and as teens — by asking key questions about diet, milk consumption, the amount of exercise they get and whether there is a family history of osteoporosis.

The report also included recommendations for daily calcium intake at various ages. In 2003, the academy issued guidelines for vitamin D, which is needed to help the body absorb calcium. Those guidelines recommend vitamin D supplements for breast-fed-only babies and older children who don't get adequate amounts of vitamin D, either because they don't drink vitamin-D fortified milk or don't get enough sunlight (without sunscreen). The human body needs 10 to 15 minutes per week of sun exposure to produce adequate vitamin D.

 
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It is not always easy to get children to consume calcium-rich foods. "We've gotten away from the idea of milk with every meal," says Lynda Mezansky, clinical nutrition specialist at The Tully Health Center in Stamford, Conn. One reason is allergy concern. Although many people cannot digest dairy products, which are the best calcium sources, some parents act before there is a problem and give soy formulas to their children, Mezansky says.

Another obstacle is that as children become teenagers, parents don't have the same control over their diets. "Teenagers are trying to keep their weight down, or they don't like the taste of milk. They often stop eating breakfast, so even in families where they like yogurt with fresh fruit and granola as kids, when they get older they're exposed to a whole new level of tastes, and they change," Mezansky says.

This particular problem was addressed in another recent study, published in The Journal of Pediatrics. The study included 2,300 girls who were observed for 10 years beginning at age 9. It showed that beginning at age 11, milk-drinking declines, and by the time girls reach 19, they are drinking three times more soda and 25 percent less milk than they did as children. It also indicated that the girls who drank less milk had less calcium overall in their diets, a fact that may set them up for osteoporosis when they are older.

In general, foods that contain the most concentrated calcium are dairy products such as milk, yogurt, cheese and ice cream. It makes little difference whether the item is full-fat, low-fat or skim, although some low-fat products have added skim milk to replace the fat, so there may be a slight calcium increase. But there are other good calcium sources: beans; tofu; canned salmon (with bones) and sardines (with bones); fresh salmon; almonds; sesame seeds; dried figs; certain vegetables, such as broccoli, kale, bok choy and collards; and some grains, especially fortified cereals.

"If they don't eat dairy products, it's important to use products like calcium-enriched soy milk and calcium-fortified orange juice," Mezansky says.

And if they do but say they're in a hurry, "give them a yogurt or a smoothie," she suggests, or "anything they might accept, like string cheese."

 

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