Making Healty Choices
By Lucinda Lewis

  It seems everything today is “supersized,” “fast-paced,” and “readymade.” Unfortunately, waist sizes are super-sizing as well. Look around and you’ll see the results of high carbohydrate, low nutrition diets everywhere. As a health care provider, I teach my patients’ parents about good dental care including teeth brushing, overall diet and particularly the evils of excessive sugar consumption. Home is where the training starts for young children and they should be taught to make good food choices and perform good oral hygiene daily.
  In today’s world, ubiquitous fast food television advertising drives the food choices for children. Young children are particularly vulnerable to persuasive advertising found on television. In fact, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) suggests limiting TV viewing so children are not completely inundated with mass media. Choosing the right foods, snacks and drinks for children is the responsibility of parents and not Wall Street advertising firms. Parents must control the variety, quantity and quality of the foods children consume each day by establishing firm limits.
  Most people understand that overall health is greatly influenced by the dietary choices they make. But few realize that dental health is affected as well. Native American children have one of the highest tooth decay rates in the United States. The problem is concentrated in children from low-income families. For example, 80% of dental decay occurs in 20% of the children, mostly from low socio-economic backgrounds. Tooth decay is not just a food problem. It is influenced by diet as well as a specific bacterial population in the mouth, overall oral hygiene and time. The rate of decay increases when these four causes are combined over time. The key to improving dental health is attacking all four of the contributing causes.
  While working on my reservation, I often saw children carrying 32-ounce “Big Gulps” out of 7-11 stores. How can a child possibly drink that much sugar water? Filling up on soft drinks doesn’t leave enough room for nutrient-rich foods that children require for proper growth and development. The AAP and American Academy of Pediatric Dentists recommend limiting juices and sugared drinks to 4 ounces a day up to age five, and 8 ounces after age five to about age eight. This allows children to eat a wellbalanced meal rather than fi lling up on liquids of little or no nutritional value.
  The more access children have to poor quality foods and sweets, the more cavities and unhealthy weight gain they experience. A fascinating study of the dietary changes of Alaskan villagers surrounding a “trading post” showed a marked increase in the decay rates the closer the villagers lived to the store. Conversely, rates dropped as distance increased from the “epi-center” of the carbohydrate/sugar food stuffs found on the store shelves. Restricting and controlling access to sweets and providing high-quality, portion-controlled meals can dramatically reduce cavities and improve health in children.
  Teaching children to make good food choices helps them establish healthy patterns early in life. I strongly urge parents to work as partners with their pediatrician and pediatric dentist to establish healthy limits for their children, in order to prevent more deleterious health outcomes such as diabetes and heart disease.

Lucinda Lewis, Navajo, specializes in pediatric dentistry and owns a private pediatric dental practice in Aurora, Colorado.

 

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