The Scotsman

Menu trial a recipe for healthier children

- By TOM EDEN

Children who were fed healthy family meals during a three-month trial remained healthier for years after, a study has found.

Low-income families in Edinburgh and Colchester were given simple recipe kits to cook five healthy meals a week, with scientists studying the impact on their children’s body mass index (BMI).

The BMI of children who had been cooked well-balanced meals during the scheme fell by between five and six percentage points.

Researcher­s also found that in the three years after the study, children continued to eat healthily, although there was no evidence of a similar change in their parents.

Experts from the Universiti­es of Edinburgh and Bath collected informatio­n on 285 families’ dietary habits, weight and BMI.

They found prior to the programme all the adults and children involved were eating too much saturated fat and sugar.

Professor Michele Belot, from the University of Edinburgh’s School of Economics, said: “Our results suggest that dietary habits are more malleable early on in life than later.

“We found that children in both groups moved down in the distributi­on of body mass index.

“Interestin­gly, it appears possible to affect children’s habits even if those of their parents are unchanged.”

Researcher­s said the experiment showed poorer parents that healthy dinners could be affordable.

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