Giving children more fast food meals will make them grow up to have
a lower IQ than those who regularly eat freshly-cooked meals, according
to a study.
Childhood nutrition has long lasting effects on IQ, even after
previous intelligence and wealth and social status are taken into
account, it found.
The study which examined whether the type of main meal that children
ate each day had an impact on their cognitive ability and growth.
It looked at 4,000 children aged three to five years old and compared fast food with freshly-cooked food.
The study was, undertaken by an academic at Goldsmiths, University of
London, who found that parents with a higher socio-economic status
reported that they gave their children meals prepared with fresh
ingredients more often, which positively affected their IQ.
Lower socio-economic status was linked to more children having fast food, which led to lower intelligence.
Dr Sophie von Stumm, from the department of psychology at Goldsmiths,
said, “It’s common sense that the type of food we eat will affect brain
development, but previous research has only looked at the effects of
specific food groups on children’s IQ rather than at generic types of
meals.
“This research will go some way to providing hard evidence to support
the various high-profile campaigns aimed at reducing the amount of fast
food consumed by children i”
She said her findings highlight the differences in children’s meals
who were also a social problem. “Mothers and fathers from less
privileged backgrounds often have less time to prepare a freshly cooked
meal from scratch for their children,” she said.
‘These children score lower on intelligence tests and often struggle in school.
“Schools in less privileged areas must do even more to balance
children’s diet, so that they can achieve their cognitive potential.
‘“t shows that the freshness and quality of food matters more than
just being full, in particular when children are young and developing.”
Similar discoveries were made in an Australian study published
recently. It found that while eating healthily can give a boost to
intelligence, toddlers on a diet of drinks and sweets were less bright
as they got older.
By the age of eight the ‘junk food’ children had IQs up to two points
lower than their healthy counterparts, according to the researchers .
Also an American study, published in the Journal of Epidemiology
& Community Health in 2010, showed that children who consume junk
food such as pizza, chips and biscuits before the age of three may end
up having lower IQs than children who ate home-cooked meals with fruit
and vegetables.
These children were tested five years later and had IQ scores that
were as much as five points lower than their healthier-eating peers.
The researchers suspected that the negative effect of eating junk
food so early in life may not be altered by future healthy habits
because brain development is hindered.
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