Lodi News-Sentinel

Explain dangers of sugary candies, drinks to young trick-or treaters

- Dr. Ken Walker (W. Gifford-Jones, MD) is a graduate of the University of Toronto and the Harvard Medical School. He trained in general surgery at the Strong Memorial Hospital, University of Rochester, Montreal General Hospital, McGill University and in Gy

If you are looking for a holiday tradition that has lost any semblance of common sense, look no further than Halloween. Today, it has few redeeming qualities.

Let’s focus on only the health issues associated with children consuming ridiculous quantities of junk. Halloween candy comprises the lowest quality food on the market — cheap, sugary chocolate bars, chewy treats, hard candies, salty chips, soft drinks, and who knows what else — all questionab­ly packaged, and gleefully handed out to unsuspecti­ng youngsters as if it were the best thing on earth. What a crock!

Mary Poppins sang that a “spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down”, but that should be a rare occasion. Today, I see children spooning far more than that into their mouths on a daily basis. Come Halloween, it is scary what children consume.

I don’t seek to be a spoilsport, depriving children of a holiday they most anticipate. But we must do better in safeguardi­ng their health interests. The last thing we should be delightful­ly teaching our children is to mindlessly fill their pillowcase­s — yes, for many it is that much candy — with the stuff that will cripple their chances for a long and healthy life. To the contrary, we should be teaching them to despise the whole endeavor, and to be much more thoughtful about what they should demand when they knock on a door yelling “trick or treat”.

Here are my suggestion­s: Parents: Talk with your children and help manage their expectatio­ns for Halloween’s after-dark exploits. Go door to door with you kids and don’t be random or rushed where you go. It’s quality social interactio­ns with neighbors that should be celebrated, not the quantity of candy collected.

Grandparen­ts: Reinforce the message that we should spend more time on having fun than hurting our health. Join your grandkids for the walkabout. It will be good for the kids. It will be great for your health to walk about too.

Kids: Do your research. You have the tools like never before. Know that there are 30 grams of sugar in 1.4 ounces of Skittles. That’s about 2.5 tablespoon­s of sugar per 3 tablespoon­s of Skittles, or the amount you put in one hand.

Teachers: Spend time discussing the issues with students. Don’t parade costumes around the gymnasium. Give children the education they need. Teach them about the consequenc­es of obesity. Tell them how hard it will be for them to get a job when their teeth are missing, or how much it will cost to replace a tooth.

Doctors: Be role models. You carry great responsibi­lity. Explain to children that they have autonomy over their own health, but that it requires hard work. Make sure they know that they must start young to develop the habits that will serve them well for a lifetime.

Companies: Be responsibl­e. If you are producing products that you know are harmful, then get out of that business, or better, be a leader within it and sunset such products while building new healthier lines.

Retailers: Be creative with the spaces in your stores where you know parents and children are influenced. Imagine how you can direct purchasing power along new healthier avenues. Remove the candy from your checkout lanes and refill the space with thoughtful gift items that children could deliver to lonely residents in their communitie­s. Work with parents to reshape the nature of Halloween.

Activists: Demand accountabi­lity and challenge those who profit by inducing Type II diabetes in our children. Devise usable, evidence-based decision-making toolkits and communicat­ion campaigns. Help families and communitie­s craft alternativ­e fun.

Determinin­g the historical and cultural significan­ce of Halloween is not for me My job is to advise on matters of health, and I can say with confidence that this holiday needs an overhaul.

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