New York, Feb 20 (IANS) Potatoes tend to be well-liked by kids and can be a good source of potassium and dietary fibre for children aged one-three years, a study has found.
It showed potatoes provide eight percent of the recommended daily value of fibre — important for growth, development and overall health of children.
“It’s important that consumption of all vegetables, particularly those that are good sources of potassium and dietary fibre, be encouraged in children,” said Theresa A. Nicklas from Baylor College of Medicine in the US.
“Dietary habits established during childhood often transition to adulthood, so it is hugely important to encourage children to enjoy vegetables as part of the diet in order to reap the nutrition and health benefits provided by vegetables into adulthood,” Nicklas added in the paper published in the journal Advances in Nutrition.
The research demonstrated that children aged 1-3 years consumed just 67 percent of the dietary reference intakes (DRI) for potassium and 55 percent of the DRI for fibre.
In a study of elementary school students that demonstrated students are not consuming the majority of vegetables offered to them in school lunches.
However, plate waste for white potatoes was the lowest among any type of vegetables; thus, including potatoes in school meals is one important way to help ensure children receive those key nutrients of concern.
sms\rm
(This story has not been edited by BDC staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed from IANS.)
Writers are welcome to submit their articles for publication. Please contact us through Contact Us in the Menue