This April I will be doing a mini series that goes
along with my ongoing Feeding Baby series, where I will share on one topic each
week related to your baby’s eating habits.
In Week 1, I will discuss why you shouldn’t feed
your baby rice cereal and offer alternative “first food” options. In Week 2, I
will share a general list of foods to avoid before one year. Week 3 will cover
fish safety and basic ways to prepare fish for your baby and the final week
will discuss the importance of protein and fat in your baby's diet
I am so passionate about educating others on
healthy choices and nutrition, and I think a large majority of parents are
simply uninformed when it comes to these topics, especially if this is your
first child or you don’t have any history in nutrition or medicine like I do. Everything
I include is my personal opinion, based on 6+ years of college education, personal and professional experience and significant research. I am an RN (BSN) by degree
and work closely with RDs; I believe healthy eating habits begin with your baby and I
hope this is a series that gives insight and information to all you mamas out there.
Bland and tasteless yet full of sugar, rice
cereal is white flour with iron added
back after all nutrients have been stripped from it. Regardless of your baby’s
age or overall health, rice cereal should be avoided in your baby's diet. Though often
recommended as a “first food” by pediatricians, there are many reasons that
babies should not be given baby cereal or rice cereal.
How Rice Cereal is Made:
The box of rice cereal says it’s fortified with a
dozen vitamins and minerals and it won’t expire for two years. To make rice
cereal, the whole grain rice is stripped of its nutritious and fiber-dense
shell and processed. Synthetic vitamins and minerals are added because during
the process they removed the only pieces that were integral and nutritious.
The most common reasons to avoid rice cereal are
listed below.
(1) Because a baby’s body is not made to digest grains
until age 1 (at the earliest), rice is actually hard on your baby’s tummy. The
claims that it is “easy to digest” are actually more of a myth than truth.
(2)Rice cereal is highly refined - meaning it is over-processed and
striped of all nutrients. Even when a package says “fortified,” it is fortified
with synthetic vitamins. These are less bioavailable to baby than the vitamins
that naturally occur in foods.
(3)It may cause deficiencies - often, when solids are introduced to a
baby, the amount of breastmilk a baby is receiving decreases; if this decrease
of milk is being made up with healthy vegetables, protein and healthy fat, no
problem. If it is being replaced with empty calories, that is an issue.
(4)The sugar content is so high in rice cereal that it is basically like
feeding your baby a spoonful of sugar. Does your baby seem to like rice cereal
when you feed him or her? Of course - because it is pure sugar and tastes sweet. Refined carbohydrates are bad for even
adults, but especially hard on your baby.
Dr. Alan Greene, a pediatrician at Stanford
University’s Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital -- who launched the “White
Out” campaign in 2010 to inform both parents and medical professionals about
the dangers of rice cereal -- states, “ Rice cereal is a nutritional disaster.
It’s as processed as anything in the food supply and the nutritional equivalent
of table sugar” (Szabo, 1).
(5)There have been many studies that discuss the high rates of arsenic in
rice/rice cereal.
(6)Rice cereal can be very constipating for many babies. From birth, a
baby’s digestive tract is used to processing breast milk. Because the healthy
fiber is stripped from rice cereal, it may cause pain and difficulty passing
stool.
Alternative
Healthy First Food Options
Some of the best & most nutritionally dense foods to offer when you introduce solids
include:
Avocado
>> High in
monounsaturated fat, this is one of the best foods you can give your baby as
their first food <<
Sweet Potatoes
>> Packed with
Vitamin V, C, and folate as well as high in potassium, magnesium and calcium,
sweet potatoes are a delicious first food for babies and pair well with so many
others; by far, Olivia’s favorite food <<
Butternut Squash
Steamed vegetables
>> We started
Olivia with green beans, peas, broccoli, cauliflower <<
Wild caught fish,
pureed with vegetables
>> Two of V’s
all-time favorite foods are wild-caught Alaskan cod and wild caught sockeye
salmon, especially when mixed with roasted sweet potatoes <<
Stay tuned for next week's post on foods to avoid before your baby is one year. If you have any questions about the information I am presenting or anything related to feeding your baby, I would love to discuss them further. Please leave a comment or send me an email!
Happy weekend!
I usually feed Atlas veggies at lunch time- avocados are his favourite- an rice cereal made with breast milk instead of water at night. Other than that he only has breast milk. Would you suggest cutting the rice cereal totally? Is there enough iron in those suggested foods to make up for it?
ReplyDeleteHey Sara, I sent ya an email! Let me know if you don't receive it :)
ReplyDeleteThank YOU so much - for this!!!!! Haylee - about to start eating "food"
ReplyDelete