[...] Researchers found children who had a vegetarian diet had similar mean body mass index (BMI), height, iron, vitamin D, and cholesterol levels compared to those who consumed meat. The findings showed evidence that children with a vegetarian diet had almost two-fold higher odds of having underweight, which is defined as below the third percentile for BMI. There was no evidence of an association with overweight or obesity.
Underweight is an indicator of undernutrition, and may be a sign that the quality of the child's diet is not meeting the child's nutritional needs to support normal growth. For children who eat a vegetarian diet, the researchers emphasized access to healthcare providers who can provide growth monitoring, education and guidance to support their growth and nutrition.
[...] A limitation of the study is that researchers did not assess the quality of the vegetarian diets. The researchers note that vegetarian diets come in many forms and the quality of the individual diet may be quite important to growth and nutritional outcomes. The authors say further research is needed to examine the quality of vegetarian diets in childhood, as well as growth and nutrition outcomes among children following a vegan diet, which excludes meat and animal derived products such as dairy, egg, and honey.
Journal Reference:
Laura J. Elliott et al. Vegetarian Diet, Growth, and Nutrition in Early Childhood: A Longitudinal Cohort Study [open] Pediatrics 2022
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2021-052598
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 05 2022, @06:34PM
Most vegans are vegan for ethical reasons (at least the ones I know), but many are quite aware of health and e.g., avoid processed foods etc. I don't have more than anecdote, but I doubt you will find many vegans who did not breast feed their children (I know a lot of vegans, and all that had children, when I knew them, breast fed).
There is no non-consensual suffering imposed on another being when breast feeding, so satisfies ethical vegans. But, it is fine if you want to puff up your chest, and say, "Gotcha!!!". We can define the child as non-vegan for the first year or so of its life if that makes you feel better.