Niki Gianni was 11 or 12 when she found a video on YouTube
called "Meet Your Meat." Saddened and disgusted by the footage from a
slaughterhouse, the Chicago girl announced she was no longer going to eat meat.
Her parents were less than thrilled.
"When she first said she wanted to be a vegetarian, we
were just looking at each other and we said, 'We can't be switching meals for
you. You are not going to get your protein.' We were not educated in the health
benefits," said Gianni's mother, Julie Gianni.
While many parents worry whether their vegetarian or vegan
children will receive adequate nutrition for their growing bodies, the American
Dietetic Association says such diets, as long as they are well-planned, are
appropriate for all phases of life, including childhood and adolescence.
"Appropriately planned" vegetarian or vegan diets are healthful,
nutritionally adequate and may provide health benefits in the prevention and
treatment of certain diseases, the dietetic association says.
Now an 18-year-old college freshman, Niki Gianni said her
eating habits expanded her palate and turned her away from processed foods. Her
food choices also influenced her family: Her mother is now a vegan and her
father and sister are vegetarians.
The number of vegetarians in the United States is expected
to increase over the next decade, according to the dietetic association. A
vegetarian diet is associated with a lower risk of death from ischemic heart
disease, and vegetarians also appear to have lower overall cancer rates, lower
blood pressure and lower rates of hypertension than nonvegetarians.
Vegetarianism is more than just not eating meat, said
Roberta Anding, a registered dietitian at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas
Children's Hospital and a spokesperson for the dietetic association.
"It's really embracing more of that plant-based
lifestyle and having enough variety in your diet that you can be
well-nourished," Anding said. "You can be unbelievably well-nourished
on a vegetarian diet if you choose your foods wisely and appropriately."
Lilian Cheung, director of health promotion and
communication at Harvard School of Public Health's Department of Nutrition,
agreed. Teens who abstain from eating animal-based foods but who take in
refined and sugary foods such as French fries and sodas are not doing
themselves any favors, she said.
Eating a variety of vegetables and fruits of all colors and
eating the purest form possible is vital in these diets, Cheung said. Beans,
legumes, nuts, tofu and seeds all are excellent protein sources, said Cheung,
who said veganism and vegetarianism are becoming more mainstream among young
people.
"I think the reason why veganism is getting more and
more popular is there are more celebrities like President Clinton,"
embracing the lifestyle, said Cheung, editorial director of the department's
nutrition website, The Nutrition
Source.
"(People) asked, 'How are you going to get your
protein?' They just look at you like you are abusing your children," Julie
Gianni said.Julie and Niki Gianni said they have encountered a lot of people
who had misconceptions about vegans and vegetarians, including that they are
weak or that they are not getting the vitamins and minerals they need.
In the beginning, the Giannis didn't quite know what to
serve their daughter. Niki Gianni ate a lot of vegetarian burger patties and
chicken nuggets.
"I think this happens to a lot of vegetarians: I
doubled up on eating eggs and dairy because my parents weren't sure what to
feed their 12-year-old who didn't eat meat," she said.
Now, Julie Gianni makes her own goulash and noodles and
frequently cooks with seitan, a high-protein meat substitute made from wheat.
Niki Gianni said she has yet to find a vegetable she won't eat. She loves
portobello mushroom and artichoke sandwiches, and dines in the vegan cafeteria
at college.
Niki Gianni and her family have done copious research about
their lifestyles, becoming educated about meeting their nutritional needs
through an array of fresh foods.
Such vigilance and education is vital, experts said, because
adolescence is characterized by the second and final period of rapid growth and
development. Those growing bodies need nutrients, including calcium, vitamin D,
B12 and iron.
Teens or children who are vegetarian and who then also
decide to give up dairy products need to find an alternate source of calcium,
Anding said. While calcium can be found in almonds and in green leafy
vegetables, the amount is small.
Vitamin B12, found in animal protein, can become a concern
if dairy or eggs leave the diet, Anding said. Vitamin B12 deficiencies manifest
over time. The vitamin, which can be found in fortified cereals, is stored in
the liver and when levels are low, the body withdraws the vitamin from the
organ.
"Sooner or later you are going to run out," Anding
said. "It's not going to be instant."
Anding said she treated four young women with vitamin B12
deficiencies that showed up about a year into their veganism.
"You can end up with permanent cognitive issues. I
applaud you for looking at this from an environmental perspective but I don't
want to save the planet and sacrifice you," she said. "You have to
take a B12 supplement."
To aid iron intake, Anding recommends using a cast iron
skillet for cooking; some of the iron will leach into the food. Vitamin and
mineral supplements also provide a way to get adequate iron and other essential
nutrients, she said.
"Clearly, there are some big benefits of a plant-based
diet, so I'm not objecting to that. I think the more restrictive the diet
becomes, the more exclusive the diet becomes, the harder it becomes for the
average person to execute those diet changes," she said.
Heather Lazaro, whose family lives in Orange County in
Southern California, said she was concerned when her daughter, then 11, came
home from school and announced she didn't want to eat meat.
"We didn't think it was going to last," said
Lazaro, whose daughter Alyssa is now 16. "To this day, I always worry if
she is getting the right amount of protein and vitamins" and nutrition she
needs, she said.
Alyssa Lazaro is a pescatarian; she doesn't eat land animals
or birds but eats fish. She said she just wanted to try giving up meat. In
addition to consuming plenty of vegetables and fruit, she eats soy products,
protein shakes and eggs. She said she feels better staying away from meat.
"Whenever I eat vegetables I just feel a little bit
more energetic and ready to go through life with a big smile on my face,"
the high school student said.
Anding and Cheung said young people and their parents should
get information from reputable websites such as eatright.org,kidseatright.org and thenutritionsource.org.
Vegetarians and vegans have to be willing to explore new
foods and Anding said she would discourage such lifestyles for children who
like only a handful of foods, including meat.
Anding, who for decades has worked with children and teens
with eating disorders, said parents also need to make sure their children are
eating. She has seen veganism used to mask those disorders.
"It's really unfortunate because it is taking a
lifestyle that is unbelievably healthy and using it to perpetuate an eating
disorder," she said.
Cheung recommends that parents talk to their children's
pediatrician about a vitamin supplement and have them see a registered
dietician so they have a good overview of what they should be eating every day.
"It can be a very unhealthy diet if the choices are
unhealthy," she said. "But it is very possible to have a very
healthful vegan diet as well if you choose wisely.
"We just need to get more literate, get more knowledge.
I don't think we should basically just categorize one way or another,"
Cheung said. "It just depends on what foods are chosen."
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