iVillage.com: Surprising Ways You're Making Your Kid Fat
Hanging on to the Nightly Bottle
| Parents can be as much of the problem as kids are when it comes to ditching the bottle. Whether you love the closeness of snuggling with your toddler as he drifts off to sleep with his baba or he's the one resistant to giving it up, it's important to make the leap. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that babies should be off the bottle at age one because bottle drinkers tend to consume an excess of milk and not enough protein- and iron-rich foods, which they need for development. And gulping a bottle beyond babyhood also encourages children to slurp down too many calories. In fact, children who were still using a bottle at 24 months were about 30 percent more likely to be obese by 5 1/2 years old, even after accounting for mom’s weight, the child's birth weight, and infancy feeding practices, according to a study in the Journal of Pediatrics. (WIN-Initiative/Getty Images) The Full Story from iVillage.com |
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