Catherine Saxelby's Foodwatch | Q. Should children drink low-fat or full-fat milk?

Home Expert Advice FAQs - Getting kids to eat right Q. Should children drink low-fat or full-fat milk?

Q. Should children drink low-fat or full-fat milk?

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

 

The question in full:

Q. We hear about childhood obesity all the time. Should kids be switching to lite milks or stay with full fat? Seems lite milks still have all the calcium etc they need?

 

A. The current recommendation is that after the age of two, low-fat milks (not skim) are fine for children.  For children prone to being overweight or who come from a family with a history of heart disease and/or obesity, they are a good idea. And the bonus is that many of these low-fat milks have had their calcium boosted so your kids will get MORE calcium per glass than from full-cream milk.

 

There are so many brands at the dairy case these days, it’s very confusing.  Look for a low-fat or reduced-fat milk with 2 g fat per 100ml (check the Nutrition Information panel at the back of the label). Lite White or similar is the usual brand name but it varies state to state.

 

There’s no need to drop to a No-fat or skim milk for kids (Shape, Pura Tone) which have almost zero fat. Full-fat milk has 4 g per 100ml (which means 4% fat) so going half way is a good compromise between taste, fat and calcium for children.

 

 

Want expert advice from nutritionist Catherine Saxelby delivered direct?

Are you looking for ideas on how to eat well when you've little time to cook? Taste tests and reviews? The Foodwatch eNewsletter has the news, recipes, tricks and the tips to keep you informed, eating healthily and staying slim without dieting - and it's FREE!! Take a look at past issues here.

 

 

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Write comment

smaller | bigger

busy

Shopping Cart

Your Cart is currently empty.