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Ontario County Public Health
3019 County Complex Drive, Canandaigua, NY 14424
Phone: 585-396-4343 spacerspacer800-299-2995
Fax: 585-396-4551


PICKY EATERS

"IS YOUR TODDLER EATING ENOUGH?"

Does your child eat from only one food group?

It seems as though, as infants, children eat just about everything you feed them but as they grow, "different" foods become "disgusting" foods. Parent's typically try new foods with their children and become hurt or disappointed when the child persists that they "will not like it", "it's yucky", "I'm not eating it".

While toddlers know when a food is new, they haven't yet developed the capacity to accept a parent's reassurance that it's good. At age two or three, kids aren't at the stage of development where they can understand the concept of 'Trust me, you'll like this'.

A toddler's rejection of a new food may be one of those attempts at independence that are common and quite healthy at this age. This is a time when children want to be in control of their own choices and toddlers can also be profoundly conservative in ways that go way beyond eating.Week after week, they may want to wear the same clothes, hear the same stories, watch the same videos. They generally don't like anything new: Routine and predictability gives them a strong sense of security.

Individual temperament also plays a role in how willing a child is to try new food. If he has a hard time adjusting to new experiences in general, he'll probably be especially slow to accept changes at the dinner table and we must remember that kids have food likes and dislikes, just as adults do.

Letting toddlers approach food in their own way makes psychological sense because it teaches them to listen to their body's cues. Children are wonderful in terms of knowing what they need nutritionally and if we can let them trust their own hunger as a guideline, we're doing them a big favor.

Getting into a battle over food sets up a lot of issues that become hard to eliminate as kids get older. One is a parent-child power struggle. Another is that they may learn to eat to self-soothe or out of anger, not for pleasure or nutrition. Don't stop trying the new foods, you don't want your child to get the message that you don't expect her to eat it. Just be sure to put out a variety of foods at the family table so there's something that your toddler will want to eat. Eventually the child will try the new food but it may take several tastes before they actually like it.

Keep in mind that toddlers do not eat as much as when they were an infant so they will naturally eat less. It may be common for him/her to eat only one good meal per day. Here are some tactics that have worked in the past in getting toddlers to eat, whether it is food in general or new foods that they are skeptical of trying:

Toddlers are notorious nibblers. But are they getting the nutrients they need? The good news:

Grazing on pint-size portions is perfectly healthy for 1 to 3 year-olds. While kids pushing preschool age may need more, and younger ones may need less, children don't have to eat from the five food groups every day, as long as they consume a balanced diet over a month.

Here is a crash course on little-kid servings with the five food groups (two seperate charts):

 VEGETABLES
(2-3 servings daily)

 DAIRY
(2-3 servings daily)

 FRUITS
(2-3 servings daily)

 What is 1 serving?

 What is 1 serving?

 What is 1 serving?

1/4 cup cooked broccoli

1 3/4 inch chunk natural cheese

1 wedge of cantaloupe
1/4 cup peas
(slightly mashed)
1 slice processed american cheese
6 sections of orange
1/4 cup corn (slightly mashed)
1/2 cup fruit yogurt
1/2 kiwi
1/4 cup mashed potatoes or yams

1/2 cup plain or chocolate milk
(use whole milk until child is 2)

1/2 medium banana
6 french fries

1 cup ice cream
(note: it's high in sugar and fat)

1/4 cup canned peaches
6 cooked baby carrots

3/4 cup macaroni and cheese

1/2 cup of 100 percent apple or orange juice (no more than 1 cup per day)
1/2 grilled cheese sandwich

PROTEIN
(2 servings daily)

GRAINS
(6 - 11 servings daily)

 What is 1 serving?

 What is 1 serving?

1 hard-boiled or scrambled egg (with white and yolk)
1/4 cup cooked pasta or rice
1/2 cup baked beans
1/2 slice of toast (whole wheat is best)
1/3 hamburger patty
1/4 cup hot cooked cereal
3 slices of turkey luncheon meat
2 to 3 saltine crackers
1 fish stick (may be high in fat)
1/3 cup Cheerios
3 chicken nuggets (may be high in fat)
2 graham-cracker squares


Concerned that your toddler may not be eating enough fruits, vegetables or meats? Giving him/her a multivitamin can help balance their diet but consult your pediatrician first. Fat is needed for brain, nerve and overall physical growth. Try to maximize the calories with what he/she will eat - extra butter, peanut butter, cheese, gravy (Pediasure can be added to almost anything - pudding, potatoes, macaroni and cheese).

 

 

 

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