Gezellig samen eten en kinderen worden minder dik.*
Uit een grootschalig onderzoek in Australië blijkt dat tieners die samen met de rest van de familie eten doorgaans minder dik zijn dan tieners die alleen bijv. bij de TV eten.
Vermoedelijk komt dit doordat ouders meer aandacht schenken aan gezonde voeding en het samen eten. Dit aspect is nog belangrijker dan het aantal keren samen eten.
Family
meals cut teenage fatness
They might prefer to be in front of the TV or Playstation, but Brisbane
teenagers are likely to be healthier if they eat meals with mum and dad.
University of Queensland researchers working on the world's longest health study
found teens who ate regularly with their family were less likely to be
overweight.
Lead researcher, Dr Abdullah Al Mamun from UQ's School of Population Health said
regular family meals could reduce snacking and make for healthier food and
social habits.
"Eating together will enable the parent to have better knowledge of the
child's food choices and amount that they tend to eat," Dr Mamun said of
the study, which appears in the latest edition of American journal, Obesity
Research.
The study found having a healthy maternal attitude to family eating and diet was
more important than the frequency of shared meals.
Even though most mothers said they had a family meal at least once a day, only
43 percent of them said eating together was very or quite important.
The findings have been drawn from the world's longest running health study - the
Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy, which has followed the
progress of Brisbane mothers and their families since 1981.
The survey of 3795 mothers and their teenagers was collected in Brisbane when
the teenagers were at age 14, in 1995.
It showed about half the families ate red meat most days and one-fourth had fast
food most days or two to three times per week.
Even though more than half of the families had children who played sports four
to seven days a week about 40 percent still found enough time to watch five or
more hours of TV a day.
Dr Mamun's paper was co-written, with Mater and University of Bristol
researchers and fellow UQ researcher and Mater Study founder, Professor Jake
Najman.
The Mater Study was started in 1981 by Professor Najman as a health and social
study of 7223 pregnant women.
Researchers have followed the children's growth over the decades and study was
widened to include prenatal, postnatal, childhood and adolescent periods of the
child with those babies now in their early 20s.
Dr Abdullah Al Mamun
Research Australia
researchaustralia.com.au
(Nov. 2005)