






Tufts
Study Links Watching TV With Bad Diet
Researcher Says Kids Who Watch TV During
Meals Tend To Eat Unhealthy Foods Instead Of Fruits, Vegetables
Boston
- For the first time, researchers may have actually proven
that TV is unhealthy. A new study released by Tufts University's
Katharine Coon found that children who watch TV during meals often
eat unhealthy foods instead of fruits and vegetables.
"When
the TV is on, our attention is diverted and eating can become
automatic," Coon told CNN. "When that happens it's easy
to let healthy habits slip away and less healthy habits take over."
With
only one third of children actually getting the recommended number
of daily vegetable servings, Coon found the impact on diet to
be damaging. "I wasn't expecting TV, of all the variables I measured,
to be so strong, or to be the strongest variable, which turned
out to be," Coon told CBS.
The
findings, said Tufts' Katherine
Tucker, are significant. "Students in this age group are eating
so few fruits and vegetables already that every little bit counts,"
Tucker, a nutrition expert at Tufts, told the Boston Herald.
During
her research, the Tufts nutritional sociologist found that families
with high television use had a higher intake of processed meats,
salty snacks, and pizza and a lower intake of fruits and vegetables,
when compared to those with low television use.
The
findings may be the first of their kind.
"It's
the first time, to my knowledge, a study has shown that TV is
actually correlated with less consumption of good foods, or the
foods that are nutritionally important in children's diets, including
fruits and vegetables," Coon told CBS's Charles Osgood.
Coon
attributes the connection to a number of factors.
"The
first is that high television viewing goes along with a cluster
of family food behaviors where people tend to be unfocused. They
want easy routines, no muss, no fuss," she said to Reuters.
"When a family is in that kind of mode, there is a tendency to
reach for easy solutions." Those solutions tend to be less healthy,
Coon added.
The
Tufts researcher also found that the TV programming, itself, may
also have had an impact. "It may or may not be a coincidence that
the food culture promoted on TV promotes that, while fruits and
vegetables are healthy, they are more linked to sit-down meal
occasions," Coon told Reuters.
Education
may also play a role. CNN
reported: "Those with the least amount of schooling tend to keep
the television on the most."
The
solution: turn off the TV during meals.
"I
think it's really important for parents just to try and turn off
the TV and be with their kids when their kids are eating -- as
much as possible really make it a collective activity," Coon said
in an interview on CNN's Early Edition. "Parents need to
really eat fruits and vegetables themselves and remember that
the way parents model their food habits is a very, very important
influence on kids' behaviors."
In
a Boston Herald article, Tucker added, "Families that sit
down to dinner together do better in a number of ways."
Posted
01-11-01





