Call & Times

Sweet excess: How the baby food industry hooks toddlers on sugar

- By LAURA REILEY

Leading health organizati­ons recently released their first consensus recommenda­tions about what young children should be drinking: only breast milk or, if necessary, infant formula until a baby is six months old, with water introduced around then, and plain cow’s milk at around their first birthday.

That’s it. No juice, no flavored or plant-based milks, no caffeinate­d beverages or sodas.

The good news is parents of infants seem to be on the right track – breastfeed­ing is on the rise. But once children get into the toddler zone, it’s pandemoniu­m.

There’s been a boom in unhealthy foods and beverages for children six months to 3 years old, packaged for convenienc­e and often promising to make children stronger and smarter.

Dietary supplement­s said to boost the immune system. Squeezy pouches boasting 3 grams of protein and 3 grams of fiber. Oven-baked stone-ground wheat “wafflez,” superfood puffs and a baffling array of toddler milks purported to aid brain and eye developmen­t.

Billy Roberts, senior analyst of food and drink at market research firm Mintel, says that there were four times more product launches in the baby and toddler food aisle in 2018 than in 2005, with a huge surge in new toddler foods and drinks, most of which are extremely high in sugar.

What’s driving this surge? Experts point to several factors. Parents are demanding convenient, on-the-go packaging. Industry’s lust for market share has driven advertisin­g aimed at parents of toddlers. And there’s been little nutritiona­l guidance for new parents, who glean what they can from parenting chat rooms, family lore and pediatrici­ans, many of whom had only a single class on nutrition during medical school.

With more dual-income families, convenienc­e has become central to beleaguere­d parents passing packaged snacks back to hungry and/or bored toddlers in car seats kitted out with cup holders and snack wells.

“Americans are snackers,” said Mary Story, a professor of global health, and family medicine and community health at Duke’s Global Health Institute. “And the food industry is always looking for novel ways to market their products and increase demand.”

For a scientific report for the 2015 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, her team found that 29% of toddlers’ calories were coming from snacks, most of which were salty or sweetened processed foods, not fruits and vegetables.

Jennifer Harris leads a multidisci­plinary team of researcher­s at the University of Connecticu­t that studies food marketing to children, adolescent­s and parents, and how it affects diets and health.

She says that toddler snacks are often positioned as healthier than those for adults.

“But we didn’t find that to be the case in terms of added sugar, sodium, saturated fat and calories,” Harris said. “You wouldn’t give your toddler Cheetos, but you would give them Gerber puffs, which are basically the same thing.”

A yogurt-based Happy Baby snack for children contains a teaspoon of sugar per serving, with four servings per pouch. Happy Tot’s organic bananas and carrots fiber and protein bar contains 2 teaspoons of sugar per serving. Happy Family Organics did not respond to requests for comment.

Lorrene Ritchie, director of the Nutrition Policy Institute at the University of California Division of Agricultur­e and Natural Resources, worries that low-income parents will be more inclined to spend their money on these heavily advertised baby foods, toddler milks and packaged snacks at the expense of healthier options.

“The amount of funding spent to promote healthy foods, which is mostly via federal nutrition education dollars such as WIC and SNAP-Ed, is dwarfed by food marketing which is mostly for unhealthy and ‘treat’ foods and beverages,” she said. “I fear we will never make a big dent in diet-related chronic disease until we level this playing field.”

Researcher­s found that children who watch 80 minutes of television per day view more than 800 ads for junk food annually. Toddlers and preschoole­rs are particular­ly vulnerable because they can’t distinguis­h between programmin­g and promotion and don’t yet understand the intent of advertisin­g to persuade.

Infants need to eat about 35 to 50 calories for each pound of their weight, largely to fuel the first year’s rapid growth spurt. That growth slows for toddlers, requiring 35 to 40 calories per pound, according to guidelines from the Institute of Medicine. If a toddler eats a total of 1,200 calories that includes Gerber sweet potato puffs (25 calories and 6% of a day’s carbs per serving) or Welch’s fruit snacks (80 calories and 11 grams of sugar per serving), that may squeeze out the healthy stuff.

Those decisions have consequenc­es. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that nearly 14% of 2- to 5-year-olds are obese (above the 95th percentile for body mass index), a percentage that is higher for African Americans, Hispanics and low-income Americans. A new study says that in the United States, childhood obesity alone is estimated to cost $14 billion annually in direct health expenses.

What babies and toddlers drink is equally impactful. Nearly four decades ago, Nestlé was villainize­d for convincing Third World mothers that infant formula was better than breast milk. In 1981 an internatio­nal code limiting the marketing of breast-milk substitute­s was ratified by the World Health Organizati­on and was adopted by most countries, but not the United States, Harris said.

“The code was designed to protect consumers from unscrupulo­us marketing,” she said. “When infant formula is marketed to parents, it is positioned as convenient and more scientific because it’s a ‘formula,’ and that it’s an acceptable – if not a better – alternativ­e to breast milk. All of that is prohibited under the code.”

As a result of the marketing prohibitio­n, sales of formula for infants lagged. The multinatio­nal companies behind the $55 billion global baby food and formula industry had to expand their customer base, inventing new products. They developed follow-up formulas for children six months and up, often called “growing-up milks” or “toddler milks.”

Frequently marketed for picky eaters, these milks prey on parents nervous about the frequency and quantity of toddler feedings. They often make nutrient claims – “DHA and iron to support brain developmen­t” – but Harris said there are no legal requiremen­ts that these front-of-package claims be supported by sound scientific research. These products are typically composed of powdered milk, corn syrup solids and vegetable oil, with more sodium and less protein than whole cow’s milk. A Go & Grow toddler drink from Similac contains 150 calories, with 15 grams or 3½ teaspoons of sugar per serving.

A statement from Abbott Nutrition, Similac’s parent company, said that Go & Grow by Similac does not contain added table sugar.

 ?? Washington Post photo by Bill O’Leary ?? A yogurt-based snack for children contains a teaspoon of sugar per serving, and four servings per pouch.
Washington Post photo by Bill O’Leary A yogurt-based snack for children contains a teaspoon of sugar per serving, and four servings per pouch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States