Clinical practice: vegetarian infant and child nutrition.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the benefits and risks of vegetarianism, particularly focusing on the nutritional adequacy of vegetarian diets including dairy for children.
Results Summary
The study found that a lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet including dairy products can meet all nutritional needs of growing children, with growth patterns similar to omnivorous peers. However, vegan diets without dairy require supplementation, especially for vitamin B12, calcium, zinc, and high-quality protein.
Population
Vegetarian children, with specific emphasis on those consuming dairy.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vegetarian diet | decrease | ischaemic heart disease | - | - | associated with lower mortality | #1 |
vegetarian diet | decrease | obesity | - | - | associated with lower prevalence | #2 |
vegetarian diet including dairy | no change | growth | children | - | growth has been shown to be similar | #3 |
vegetarianism | increase | eating disorders | adolescents | - | associated with eating disorders | #4 |
well-balanced lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet including dairy products | no change | nutritional needs | the growing child | - | can satisfy all nutritional needs | #5 |
vegan diet excluding all animal food sources | decrease | vitamin B(12) deficiency | - | - | has at least to be supplemented with | #6 |
The aim of this review is to give insight on the benefits and risks of vegetarianism, with special emphasis on vegetarian child nutrition. This eating pattern excluding meat and fish is being adopted by a growing number of people. A vegetarian diet has been shown to be associated with lower mortality of ischaemic heart disease and lower prevalence of obesity. Growth in children on a vegetarian diet including dairy has been shown to be similar to omnivorous peers. Although vegetarianism in adolescents is associated with eating disorders, there is no proof of a causal relation, as the eating disorder generally precedes the exclusion of meat from the diet. A well-balanced lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet, including dairy products, can satisfy all nutritional needs of the growing child. In contrast, a vegan diet, excluding all animal food sources, has at least to be supplemented with vitamin B(12), with special attention to adequate intakes of calcium and zinc and energy-dense foods containing enough high-quality protein for young children. The more restricted the diet and the younger the child, the greater the risk for deficiencies.