Fruit Juice is a Target in the War Against Obesity
18/08/06
Some Minnesota doctors are recommending that
fruit juice be eliminated from the WIC program,
because it may be making kids fat.
Maura
Lerner,
Star
Tribune
Last
update: August 18, 2006 – 1:02 AM
http://www.startribune.com/1244/story/619828.html
The
Minnesota Medical Association has opened a new front
on the war on obesity.
The
target: fruit juice.
The association, which represents 10,000 doctors,
said that apple juice and orange juice and the like
are to blame, in part, for the fattening of America's
children.
And this week, it asked the federal government to
drop all fruit juices from a subsidized food program
for 8 million low-income women and children,
including 130,000 in Minnesota.
"There's no real value of juice in a child's diet,"
said Dr. Sarah Jane Schwarzenberg, an obesity
researcher and pediatrician at the University of
Minnesota who is leading the charge to reform the WIC
(Women, Infants & Children) program.
Contrary to popular belief, she said, even 100
percent fruit juice is not the moral equivalent of
fresh fruit.
"Fruit juice has the same number of calories per
ounce as pop, sometimes a little bit more," she said.
And while she said she doesn't believe juice deserves
all the blame, she said the calories can really pile
on when kids swig juice boxes at lunch, snack and
dinner.
"Juice should be considered as a treat," she said,
"the same way you might consider a candy bar."
Plan
adds fruits, vegetables
Until now, WIC has supplied participants with fruit
juices, but not fruits or most vegetables.
But last week, it proposed a major overhaul,
including a reduction in the amount of juice supplied
to children and the addition of fruits and vegetables
to the WIC menu.
On Monday, the Minnesota Medical Association
applauded the proposal but said it didn't go far
enough.
"MMA physicians believe that the consumption of fruit
juice contributes to obesity in children," Dr. David
Luehr, the association's president, wrote in a letter
to WIC's director. He urged the agency "to go even
further and entirely eliminate juice from the list of
WIC-eligible foods."
Susan Acker, a spokeswoman for the WIC program, which
is based in Alexandria, Va., said only that "we
welcome input and comment" and that the agency was
"looking forward to hearing from all interested
parties."
'Healthy
in moderation'
Some, though, say the demonization of fruit juice is
unfair.
"I would contend that juice, 100 percent juice, is
healthy in proper moderation," said Marty Ordman,
vice president of marketing and communications for
the Dole Food Co., which sells fruit juice. "I just
find it hard to believe that somebody would compare
drinking 6 ounces of juice to drinking a 12-ounce can
of sugar-loaded soda pop."
Schwarzenberg, who serves on the Minnesota Medical
Association's obesity task force, said that even "100
percent fruit juice" can be hyper-caloric. With
orange and apple juice, she said, manufacturers often
mix in extra-sweet pear or grape juice to counter the
natural tartness and appeal to children. "We get a
lot of concentrated sugar calories that can
contribute not only to obesity but also to cavities,"
she said.
A small amount, she admits, "is not going to throw
them into obesity." However, she said, "many kids are
drinking it through the day." Add in other
nutritional lapses, like fast food, and "you get
obesity," she said. "The only way that we can handle
this is to start going after them one at a time."
Too
strict?
Jean Kinsey, a University of Minnesota economist who
served on a national advisory panel for the WIC
program, was cool to the doctors' proposal.
"I would say it's probably not a good idea to cut off
all juice," said Kinsey, co-director of the Food
Industry Center, part of the College of Agriculture.
"I mean, children do need fluids, too, and it's
probably more nutritious than just drinking water."
Kinsey served on a panel of experts at the Institute
of Medicine, based in Washington, D.C., which
recommended in 2005 most of the changes that WIC is
now adopting.
But overly strict limits can backfire, she suggested.
"I would rather have a child develop a taste for
fruit juice than for soda pop as an alternative."
Maura Lerner • 612-673-7384
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Star Tribune. All rights reserved.