Survey: 1 In 200 US Kids Are Vegetarian

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MIKE STOBBE | 01/11/09 04:48 PM | AP

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Sam Silverman, 16, of Westborough, Mass., works out at the YMCA gym, in Westborough, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2009. Silverman, co-captain of his high school football team, and a vegetarian, says he's pleased with his health and has no problems sticking to his diet. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Sam Silverman is co-captain of his high school football team _ a safety accustomed to bruising collisions. But that's nothing compared with the abuse he gets for being a vegetarian.

"I get a lot of flak for it in the locker room," said the 16-year-old junior at Westborough High School in Massachusetts.

"All the time, my friends try to get me to eat meat and tell me how good it tastes and how much bigger I would be," said Silverman, who is 5-foot-10 and 170 pounds. "But for me, there's no real temptation."

Silverman may feel like a vegetable vendor at a butchers' convention, but about 367,000 other kids are in the same boat, according to a recent study that provides the government's first estimate of how many children avoid meat. That's about 1 in 200.

Other surveys suggest the rate could be four to six times that among older teens who have more control over what they eat than young children do.

Vegetarian diets exclude meat, but the name is sometimes loosely worn. Some self-described vegetarians eat fish or poultry on occasion, while others _ called vegans _ cut out animal products of any kind, including eggs and dairy products.

Anecdotally, adolescent vegetarianism seems to be rising, thanks in part to YouTube animal slaughter videos that shock the developing sensibilities of many U.S. children. But there isn't enough long-term data to prove that, according to government researchers.

The new estimate of young vegetarians comes from a recent federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study of alternative medicine based on a survey of thousands of Americans in 2007. Information on children's diet habits was gleaned from about 9,000 parents and other adults speaking on the behalf of those under 18.

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"I don't think we've done a good job of counting the number of vegetarian youth, but I think this is reasonable," Amy Lanou, a nutrition scientist at the University of North Carolina-Asheville, said of the government estimate. She works with the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a vegan advocacy group.

Vegetarians say it's animal welfare, not health, that most often causes kids to stop eating meat.

"Compassion for animals is the major, major reason," said Richard Schwartz, president of Jewish Vegetarians of North America, an organization with a newsletter mailing list of about 800. "When kids find out the things they are eating are living animals _ and if they have a pet...."

Case in point is Nicole Nightingale, 14, of Safety Harbor, Fla. In 2007, Nightingale was on the Internet to read about chicken when she came across a video on YouTube that showed the birds being slaughtered. At the end, viewers were invited to go to the Web site peta.org _ People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Nicole told her parents she was going vegan, prompting her mother to send an angry letter to PETA. But the vegan diet is working out, and now her mother is taking steps to become a vegetarian, too, said Nightingale, an eighth-grader.

She believes her experience was typical for a pre-adolescent vegetarian. "A lot more kids are using the Internet. They're curious about stuff and trying to become independent and they're trying to find out who they are," she said.

Vegetarians are most often female, from higher-income families and living on the East or West coasts, according to previous studies. One good place to find teen vegetarians is Agnes Scott College, a mostly white, all-women's private school in suburban Atlanta with about 850 students. Roughly 5 to 10 percent of Agnes Scott students eat vegetarian, said Pete Miller, the college's director of food service.

Frequently, the most popular entree at the college dining hall is a fresh mozzarella sandwich with organic greens. And the comment board (called "the Beef Board," as in "what's your beef?") often contains plaudits for vegetarian dishes or requests for more. "They're very vocal," Miller said of his vegetarian diners.

Eating vegetarian can be very healthy _ nutritionists often push kids to eat more fruits and vegetables, of course. For growing children, however, it's important to get sufficient amounts of protein, vitamins B12 and D, iron, calcium and other important nutrients that most people get from meat, eggs and dairy.

Also, vegetarian diets are not necessarily slimming. Some vegetarian kids cut out meat but fill up on doughnuts, french fries, soda or potato chips, experts said.

"Vegetarian doesn't mean low-calorie," said Dr. Christopher Bolling, who directs weight management research at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. He said roughly 10 to 15 percent of the overweight kids who come to his medical center's weight loss program have tried a vegetarian diet at some point before starting the program.

Rayna Middlebrooks, 15, last year started a weight-loss program offered by Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, a nonprofit hospital organization. She said she's been on a vegetarian diet for four years and now carries about 250 pounds on her 5-foot-3 inch frame.

Her mother confirmed that, and said that although Rayna does a great job of cooking vegetable-rich stir-fried meals for herself, the girl also loves pasta, soda and sweets. "I have to watch her with the candy," said Barbara Middlebrooks, of Decatur.

On the flip side is Silverman, the Boston-area football player. He's pleased with his health and has no problem sticking to his diet. Rather than try to negotiate the school cafeteria line, he brings his lunch to school. It's the same lunch every day _ rye bread, some chicken-like tofu, cheese, a clementine and an assortment of Nutrigrain, Cliff, granola and Power Bars.

He was raised vegetarian and said it's now so deeply ingrained that the idea of eating meat is nauseating. Recently, he ate something he belatedly realized might contain chicken. "I felt sick the rest of the day, until I threw up," he said.

___

On the Net:

The CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs

Sam Silverman is co-captain of his high school football team _ a safety accustomed to bruising collisions. But that's nothing compared with the abuse he gets for being a vegetarian. "I get a lot of f...
Sam Silverman is co-captain of his high school football team _ a safety accustomed to bruising collisions. But that's nothing compared with the abuse he gets for being a vegetarian. "I get a lot of f...
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Forced, not by choice

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 01/14/2009

my daughter now a freshmen in college is vegan. 2 years after becoming vegan she lost her period because she was so thin. At that point ( around 16) she went back to eating high fat dairy put on some weight and the period came back. She's really healthy now, at the right weight for her body and eats vegan at school...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 01/13/2009
- vjoseph I'm a Fan of vjoseph 65 fans permalink
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As a pescatarian, I approve. In fact, when/if I have kids, I would definitely raise them vegetarians

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 01/13/2009

You can't keep the planets consciousness from evolving no matter how many greedy factory farms try to keep you down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:49 PM on 01/12/2009
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if kids are going to choose to go vegitarian, we should do more to educate them on it. start adding the routine to those middleschool health classes we give that have nutrition in them. teach them how to get the nutirients they need.

they are going to choose to do it, so why not teach them the right way?


saying that, I still dont know why people dont like bacon cheese burgers, but hey to each their own!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:30 PM on 01/12/2009
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The article cited the kids have ethical reasons for being a vegetarian more than nutritional ones.

Eliminating artery clogging animal fats is the added health benefits to eating vegetarian or vegan, plus benefitting from nutrients in vegetables and fruits. Lastly being vegan or vegetarian is good for the environment.The way that we breed animals for food is a threat to the planet. It pollutes our environment while consuming huge amounts of water, grain, petroleum, pesticides and drugs. The results are disastrous. We focus so much of our food production on feed to provide to animals to be slaughtered and that limits our farming economy.

Bacon cheeseburgers are gross...most likely your tastebuds are responding to the fat and the salt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 PM on 01/12/2009
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ok sparky, take a deep breath.

I said that it is perfectly fine to be a vegitarian/vegan. but like the article itself said, many veggies still eat unhealthy, eating to many fatty foods such a french fries and chips believing they are eating healthy. So we should add a proper method to teaching kids to eat healthy vegitarian/vegan.

save the preachy-ness about your lifestyle choice to live that way, its fine with me. yes, i do like the fat and the salt, its yummy yummy in my tummy. you like tofu stir-fry. fine, order from a different portion of the menu. i leave you alone, you leave me alone, i dont understand your choice but hey, different strokes....

your sanctimoniousness is missplaced on this one. i was on your side. its smugness like this that makes people dislike the self-righteousness of your position.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 01/13/2009
- Vickster I'm a Fan of Vickster 16 fans permalink
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Agribusiness is bad for the environment, regardless of what is grown (fruits, vegetables, grains or meat). And by the way, statistically, vegetarians and vegans have worse general health than the omnivorous population.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 PM on 01/13/2009
- odyssey58 I'm a Fan of odyssey58 6 fans permalink

I agree about teaching teens how to do it correctly. The ones that I have talked to are pretty ignorant, especially about B12.. The also think that having spaghetti with just tomato sauce qualifies as an entree. There can be a knowledge gap that can have long term consequences.

And I think that a bacon cheeseburger made with local grass-fed beef, pork, and cheese is wonderful!
I was one of those teens 35 years ago. Now I'm a born-again carnivore who's been saved for about 10 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 01/13/2009

Funny, our school's cafeteria thinks the same thing. Seeing as our school is a boarding school, I don't know how the vegetarians survive. At least their arteries won't clog from the grease.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 01/14/2009
- cayuse I'm a Fan of cayuse 15 fans permalink
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"You are what you eat", if you body is all that you are.

"Life is not nurished by bread alone",

"It is not what goes into your mouth that defiles you, but what comes out of your mouth"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 01/12/2009

The video speaks for itself: www.meat.org

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 01/12/2009

Vegan for the past 5 yrs and could not be happier about it. When I can eat really well, and no souls have to be extinguished in the process... why not?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 01/12/2009
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Yup....once you go vegan you can't go back. I began as a vegetarian then became vegan 3 years ago.People think the diet is limiting but it really opens you to what all there is to eat beyond animal products.Food tastes good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 PM on 01/12/2009

Exactly. People ask all the time, "well what can you/do you eat?" In the past 3 days alone i've had Burmese, Cuban, and Italian and have enjoyed all of em. It truly does open your culinary experience up to the world beyond chicken fingers and steak.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 01/13/2009
- odyssey58 I'm a Fan of odyssey58 6 fans permalink

How do you know that plants don't have souls? They could be screaming as you're cutting them down or chomping away on them. The plants have to die in order for you to eat and stay alive. Something must die in order for us to live.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 01/13/2009
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