Utah Valley Pediatrics  


Subscribe

Utah Valley Pediatrics strives to keep parents up to date on the latest health topics and advisories. Our newsletter covers medicine changes and news, pediatric news, seasonal and age specific topics and what's new at Utah Valley Pediatrics.

 

Archives

December 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 6

October 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 5

August 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 4

June 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 3

April 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 2

February 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 1

Winter 2011
Vol. 4 Issue 4

Fall 2010
Vol. 4 Issue 3

Summer 2010
Vol. 4 Issue 2

Spring 2010
Vol. 4 Issue 1

Winter 2010
Vol. 3 Issue 4

Fall 2009
Vol. 3 Issue 3

Summer 2009
Vol. 3 Issue 2

Spring 2009
Vol. 3 Issue 1

Winter 2009
Vol. 2 Issue 4

Flu and Cold Alert 2008
Vol. 2 Issue 3

Fall 2008
Vol. 2 Issue 2

Spring 2008
Vol. 2 Issue 1

November 2007
Vol. 1 Issue 1

 
News from Your Pediatricians   

Spring 2009

Vol. 3 Issue 1

Medicine Changes and News

Does Your Child Really Need Vitamins?

Federal Court Finds That Vaccines Did Not Cause Autism

Pediatric News

Your Child’s Vision

Couch Potatoes Have Trouble Eating Healthy Later

Toddler Gestures

Seasonal and Age Specific

Playing it Safe: How to Avoid Injuries

Food Safety at Home

Diabetes

What's New at UVP

The Payson Office Has Moved to a New Building

 

Contacts

Kevin Moffitt
Administrator
801-373-8930

Katie Jenkins
HR Manager
801-373-8930

 

Quick Links

Office Locations

Office Hours

Pediatric Staff

Is Your Child Sick?

 

  TwitterFacebook

Couch Potatoes Have Trouble Eating Healthy Later

tvA new study has found teenagers who watch more TV also tend to eat more junk food—and these poor diet choices follow them into adulthood.

Researchers tracked 2,000 high school students over a period of at least five years. The researchers found that those who watched more than five hours of TV every day were likely to have poor diets as young adults. These young adults tended to eat fewer fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. They filled the gap in their diet with more fried foods, fast food, and sugary drinks.

Researchers also noticed that the patterns became more pronounced as the children grew older. Children transitioning to young adulthood had worse diets than did children transitioning from middle school to high school age.

Researchers believe that these trends might be caused by two factors. First, transition periods from middle school to high school and from high school to young adulthood are critical times to practice good eating behaviors. Second, teenagers might discount the importance of healthy eating because the actors in TV junk food ads targeted to teenagers usually do not look unhealthy or overweight.

To help your children have a healthy childhood and a healthy future, the American Pediatrics Association recommends that children watch no more than one to two hours of TV per day, and that children under age two not watch any at all. You can easily cut down on the amount of TV your children watch by following a few steps:

- Turn off the TV at dinner.
- Turn the TV off during homework time.
- Turn the TV off when there is not anything on that you actually want to watch.
- Make your child's bedroom a TV-free zone.
- Use TV-watching as a reward.
- Help your children brainstorm other activities they could do rather than watch TV.

It is also recommended that your children eat a healthy diet and develop a pattern of healthy eating. The following guidelines might help you incorporate more healthy foods into your children’s diet.

- Have plenty of fruits and vegetables in the house, and use them as snacks instead of unhealthier foods.
- Read the labels on foods you buy, and teach your children to understand nutrition information too.
- Model good eating behavior for your children.

If you help your children make wise TV and food choices, they are less likely to carry poor diet choices—and related poor health—into adulthood.

For more information:
Too Much TV May Lead to Too Much Fast Food

Adult Fast-Food Diets Tied to Too Much TV as Teen

 

Add Us to Your Safe List
Commonly used email filters may accidentally filter Utah Valley Pediatric e-mails from your inbox. To prevent this from happening, please add emails ending with @uvpediatrics.com to your address book to continue receiving this newsletter as well as other helpful customer service communications from Utah Valley Pediatrics. Thank you.

Privacy
Utah Valley Pediatrics respects your privacy and will never sell your email address to a third party. Read our Privacy Policy.

We Value Your Opinion
We take great pride in our service and sincerely value your feedback. Leaving a review lets us know what we are doing right or what we can do to improve. It is also a great way to help potential patients find out a little more about our office. To leave a review, please visit www.uvpediatrics.com/review

Administration | 1355 North University Avenue, Suite 220 | Provo, UT 84604 | (801) 373-8930