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Current Position:Home » News » General News » Topic

Nestlé extends US child health programme

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2013-01-28  Views: 12
Core Tip: A Nestlé programme in the city of Newark in the United States that teaches parents of young children the fundamentals of good nutrition is to be expanded.
A Nestlé programme in the city of Newark in the United States that teaches parents of young children the fundamentals of good nutrition is to be expanded.
child health programme
‘Nestlé/Newark Now!’, which was launched in 2012, will reach twice as many families in year two. Some of the mothers and other women who went through the first programme will become ‘peer educators’.

In Newark, nearly one third of children aged 3-5 years old are classified as obese – three times the US national average. ‘Nestlé/Newark Now!’ has been designed to try to address this.

The programme, run by Nestlé and the community organisation Newark Now!, helps fill a ‘gap’ in nutrition education that occurs after the first year of post-natal doctor visits and before the child reaches school age.

A bilingual public health nutritionist leads the sessions in community centres around Newark.

Fifty-five families took part in the first year, learning about the importance of breastfeeding, how to increase fruit and vegetable consumption, healthy snacking, dealing with fussy eaters, portion control and physical activity.

The curriculum was created by an advisory board made up of local nutrition and public health experts, as well as community members with experience in engaging with local residents to help manage programme content and activities.

Starting in March, parents and other women who were picked to become ‘peer educators’ will begin sharing their knowledge with hundreds more families.

The Nestlé/Newark Now! curriculum draws on the findings of the Nestlé Feeding Infants & Toddlers Study (FITS). FITS studied the dietary habits and nutrient intake of 3,200 infants, toddlers and preschoolers, making it one of the largest, most comprehensive studies of its kind in the United States.

The study found that children aged as young as 12-24 months old were beginning to develop unhealthy dietary patterns that may lead to childhood obesity.

The study also revealed fruit and vegetables were lacking in children’s diets.

 
 
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