Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Raising kids vegan can lead to beefs

Parents say abuse cases give healthy cause a bad rap

- By Kristen De Groot

PHILADELPH­IA — There’s a right way and a wrong way to raise a baby on vegan food. Those who get it wrong, parents say, give the responsibl­e ones a bad name.

A Pennsylvan­ia mother claiming to be vegan was charged this month with child endangerme­nt for feeding her baby nothing but small amounts of nuts and berries. In Italy, after a number of vegan babies required hospitaliz­ation for malnourish­ment, a lawmaker this summer proposed a bill that would make it a crime to feed children under 16 a vegan diet.

Those cases are not about veganism at all but are instead about neglect, say parents who are raising their children vegan. Pinning bad parenting on vegan diets, some say, unfairly stigmatize­s those who have done their homework and are safely raising their babies without feeding them animal products like meat and dairy.

“They stress the elements of veganism in these stories, but it’s not that these people aren’t giving their children the right kind of food, it’s that they aren’t feeding them,” said Fulvia Serra, of Fort Collins, Colo. The native of southern Italy is raising her 1-year-old son vegan, and her 12-year-old daughter is vegetarian.

“To get a child to the point of starvation, it means you are ignoring him and his crying all the time,” she said. “It’s neglect.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ book “Pediatric Nutrition” devotes a chapter to vegetarian and vegan diets. It describes how, with sound nutrition and dietary planning, “it is possible to provide a balanced diet to vegetarian­s and vegans.”

“For children in general you can have a safe vegan diet, but it has to be in consultati­on with a pediatrici­an or health care provider,” said Sheela Magge, an endocrinol­ogist at the Children’s National Health System and a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ committee on nutrition. “These are critical times in brain developmen­t, and it has to be done carefully.”

The ideal first food for babies is breast milk, Magge said. Many vegan moms opt to breast-feed, but for those who can’t or don’t, the only other option is a soy-based formula.

Key nutrients for babies are vitamin B-12 and vitamin D, as well as iron, zinc and calcium, Magge said. Getting enough B-12, which comes from milk and eggs, is a specific concern in the vegan diet, since a shortage can lead to neurologic­al problems.

As babies nurse less and start consuming more solid foods, parents need to make sure all the nutrients necessary for proper developmen­t are being provided. A pediatrici­an can help guide parents and offer supplement­s if needed.

In the Pennsylvan­ia case, Elizabeth Hawk was charged Oct. 4 with endangerin­g her 11-month-old son by restrictin­g him to a diet of small amounts of fruit and nuts. Hawk, 30, of Farmington, became “obsessed” with a vegan diet, prompting her estranged husband to contact Fayette County child welfare workers, according to a criminal complaint.

Doctors determined in August that the baby had developmen­tal delays and couldn’t crawl because he was malnourish­ed, according to the complaint.

Calls seeking comment from Hawk, her former husband and the public defender’s office weren’t returned.

Stories of vegan parents being arrested for malnourish­ed children pop up every few years in the U.S., and the cases in Italy have made internatio­nal news.

In Arizona, Kimu Parker was arrested in April 2005 for nearly starving her three children with a diet she and the children’s father called vegan. She was sentenced to 30 years in prison; the father, Blair Parker, got 15 years.

In Florida in 2005, Joseph and Lamoy Andressohn got probation for neglect in the death of their 6-month-old son, who was fed only wheat grass, coconut water and almond milk.

In Georgia, Jade Sanders and Lamont Thomas were sentenced to life in prison for the 2004 death of their 6-week-old son, who starved to death after they fed him a too-limited diet of soy milk and apple juice.

Suzanne Lewis, a high school biology teacher in Nevada, who is raising her 8-year-old son vegan, feels more scrutinize­d when she hears such stories.

“It makes me wonder if people are questionin­g me,” she said. Vegan acquaintan­ces have told her about being forwarded such articles from disapprovi­ng friends and family members, she said.

Reed Mangels is a dietitian in Amherst, Mass., who works with the Vegetarian Resource Group, a nonprofit education and advocacy group. She raised her two children, now 24 and 21, vegan. She said such news stories about malnourish­ed children can be stressful for parents who have done their homework and have to defend themselves time and again.

“The problem is not the vegan part of the diet, but it’s the inadequacy of the diet,” she said of cases that make the news.

“Where on earth did they get the idea that this was a vegan diet?” she said.

Parents raising vegan kids need to be armed with facts, like being able to rattle off which foods and supplement­s are providing adequate vitamin B-12 and protein and where their kids are getting calcium.

For those who would question the safety of raising vegan babies, her suggested response is: “The doctors say we are doing it right.”

 ?? BRENNAN LINSLEY/AP PHOTOS ?? Fulvia Serra carries Sebastiano, 1, at home in Fort Collins, Colo. Serra and her husband are raising their son vegan. Despite criticism and innuendoes, experts say it’s healthy to do so as long as parents are well informed or work with doctors.
BRENNAN LINSLEY/AP PHOTOS Fulvia Serra carries Sebastiano, 1, at home in Fort Collins, Colo. Serra and her husband are raising their son vegan. Despite criticism and innuendoes, experts say it’s healthy to do so as long as parents are well informed or work with doctors.
 ??  ?? “It’s not that these people aren’t giving their children the right kind of food, it’s that they aren’t feeding them,” says Fulvia Serra about ostensibly vegan diets that hurt kids.
“It’s not that these people aren’t giving their children the right kind of food, it’s that they aren’t feeding them,” says Fulvia Serra about ostensibly vegan diets that hurt kids.

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