The Denver Post

Pediatrici­ans leery of fruit juice for kids

- By Jill U. Adams

How much fruit juice should kids drink? Not very much. That’s the essence of the juice policy statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

School-age children (7 to 18 years old) should limit consumptio­n to eight ounces a day. Preschoole­rs (ages 4 to 6) can have four to six ounces a day, while toddlers (ages 1 to 3) should have no more than four ounces a day, and babies should not drink any juice at all.

Given that most Americans need to increase the amount of fruit and vegetables in their diets and that good diet habits can be establishe­d during childhood, why is juice so worrisome?

“The recommenda­tions are centered around two arguments,” explains Steven Abrams, a pediatrici­an at the University of Texas at Austin and one of the authors of the policy statement. Fruit juice is fruit with the fiber and some vitamins taken out, and it’s damaging to the teeth. “Some pediatrici­ans say no juice at all. I think that’s a bit tough. It is a fruit serving.”

When Gary LeRoy, a family physician in Dayton, Ohio, sees his youngest patients, he appeals to parents’ common sense. “An excessive amount of anything is not good,” he says. “Moderation is the key.”

LeRoy helped create a program with his county’s public health board called 5-2-1-0. The name refers to five daily servings of fruit and veggies, a twohour limit on screen time, one hour of physical activity, and zero sugary drinks. It’s a simple rule of thumb for a healthy lifestyle for all county residents.

As for fruit juice specifical­ly, LeRoy says, “If you use juice to count as one of the fruit and vegetable servings, then make sure it is 100 percent fruit juice.”

There are pure juices and then there are juice beverages or cocktails; the latter typically has some added ingredient­s, such as sugars or preservati­ves. Anything labeled 100 percent fruit juice comes only from fruit — that means no added sugar.

But that doesn’t mean no sugar at all. A 4.23-ounce juice box of Mott’s apple juice contains 14 grams of sugar, and the same-size serving of white grape juice from Apple & Eve has 15 grams. That’s more than three teaspoons’ worth. A sixounce box of Minute Maid orange juice contains 18 grams of sugar, similar to the same-size serving of Coca-Cola (19.5 grams in half a 12-ounce can all added sugar in this case).

LeRoy says his practice has a display just outside the exam rooms that shows the total amount of sugar in sodas, energy drinks and fruit juices. “Our patients see how much sugar is in these drinks,” he says. “The display triggers discussion in the exam room.”

It’s hard to know exactly how the advice to limit juice is being followed by American families and whether they think it is too restrictiv­e. Although the recommenda­tions were made last year, it’s too soon to answer this question, Abrams says. “But infant juice producers have stopped marketing their products. And there are fewer products.”

Nutrition standards for federally funded day-care centers were last updated in 2016. Those standards are very similar to the AAP ones: No juice for infants in their first year, a single daily four-ounce serving for 1-to-3-year-olds, and a single daily four-to-six-ounce serving for 4-to-6-year-olds.

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