(frostillustrated.com) How do your children behave at home, at play and at school? Does their behavior leave a lot to be desired? Research has shown that food additives such as sugar, food coloring and other chemicals could cause some children to experience poor health, poor learning and unacceptable behavior.
Recently, I was speaking with an elementary school teacher about the snacks and drinks that children bring to school in their lunch bags. She said that some children, who bring junk foods to school, have difficulty learning and usually exhibit behavior problems.
Dr. Benjamin Feingold, a noted allergist, believed that sugar and other food additives can cause behavioral and other learning problems in children. A recent report by the Center for Science in the Public Interest identified 17 studies suggesting that diet could adversely affect the behavior of at least some children. Most of the studies focused on artificial colors in foods consumed by children. These behavioral problems cited might include inability to concentrate and restlessness, which could contribute to difficulty with schoolwork.
In the African American, Latino and low-income white communities, many children are drinking intensely concentrated, sweetened, colored drinks and eating ice pops with the same ingredients. The ingredients listed on the labels of these drinks-artificial colors, artificial flavors, preservatives, BHA, BHT and TBHQ-could spell danger to those children who might be sensitive to these substances. Another ingredient, sulfite, also has been found to cause asthma attacks in susceptible individuals. Reports indicate that African American children experience a greater frequency of asthma attacks than any other children. (more…)
