The Yale Guide to Children's NutritionWhat is the healthiest diet for an infant? What constitutes a nutritious school lunch? How do I deal with my adolescent's eating needs and habits? Will my children receive proper nutrients if they are sick, very athletic, or vegetarians? This authoritative resource answers these and dozens of other questions, not only presenting the latest scientific knowledge about nutrition but also providing recipes from famous chefs for delicious and healthy dishes. The book, written by physicians and dietitians at the Yale University School of Medicine, an international leader in pediatric teaching, research, and clinical care, as well as by dieticians, nurses, and social workers at the Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital, is the most authoritative, comprehensive, and informative guide to childhood nutrition ever produced. The Yale Guide to Children's Nutrition includes: * information about nutritional needs at the different stages of childhood and adolescence; * advice on how to cope with a picky eater and what to feed a sick child; * special nutritional requirements for children with high cholesterol, eating disorders, allergies, diabetes, cystic fibrosis, metabolic disorders, and other conditions; * explanations of such nutritional components as calories, proteins, carbohydrates, fats, and vitamins--and examples of foods that are sources for each of them; * suggestions for healthy snacks; * ideas for eating in restaurants with children; * recipes provided by restaurants and chefs from all over the United States. |
What people are saying - Write a review
The Yale guide to children's nutrition
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictMore than 100 physicians, dietitians, nurses, and social workers from the Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital worked together to produce this authoritative guide on children's nutrition. In addition to ... Read full review
The Yale guide to children's nutrition
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictMore than 100 physicians, dietitians, nurses, and social workers from the Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital worked together to produce this authoritative guide on children's nutrition. In addition to ... Read full review
Contents
What Happens | 9 |
Taste Smell and Food Preferences | 16 |
A Guide to Healthy | 25 |
Emerging | 45 |
Food and the Family | 79 |
Feeding the Sick Child | 89 |
Too Fat? Too Thin? | 95 |
92 | 112 |
PKU and Other Metabolic Disorders | 181 |
Feeding the Infant with Cleft | 188 |
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity | 195 |
The Key to Energy | 203 |
205 | 291 |
Whats the Skinny on Fats | 375 |
Facts and Myths about Vitamins | 385 |
Drinking for the Health of | 397 |
High Blood Cholesterol | 153 |
Diabetes | 163 |
Cystic Fibrosis | 170 |
Other editions - View all
The Yale Guide to Children's Nutrition William V. Tamborlane,Janet Z. Weiswasser No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
acid activity added addition adolescents adults allow amount baby baking beans blood body bowl boys bread breast butter Calcium calories Carbohydrates cause cereal changes chapter cheese chicken child choices cholesterol consumed contain Cooking cream daily diabetes diet Dietary fiber digestive disease disorder drink effects eggs energy example feeding fiber fish fluid formula fresh frozen fruit glucose grams ground growth heat important increase individuals infant intake intestine Iron juice labels less levels low-fat lunch meal meat medium milk minerals minutes months normal Nutrient nutritional occur ounces parents pepper percent potatoes Preparation problems protein recommended reduce require rice salad salt Saturated fat sauce School serving sliced snacks sodium sources studies sugar sweet tablespoons taste teaspoon tion tomato types usually vegetables vitamin weight yogurt