1. Healthy brain
Research has found that pregnant and breastfeeding women who eat eggs are more likely to meet their child’s need for choline.1 What is choline, you ask? It boosts parts of the brain important for learning and memory. We know pregnant women need more choline, with one University of Toronto study suggesting that 87% of those women consumed less than the recommended amount.2 The lesson is: don’t avoid eggs during pregnancy!
2. Healthy growth
Two studies have shown the role eggs can play to regulate and maintain a child’s weight. One study found that children who eat higher-protein egg-based breakfasts ate fewer calories at lunch. The other study found that hunger was reduced overall when children ate a higher-protein egg-based breakfast. That breakfast increased children’s’ fullness by 32%, decreased hunger by 14% and desire to eat by 30% compared to a carbohydrate-rich meal.3 For healthy weight regulation, eggs can be key!
3. Less sugar
One of the reasons obesity is so prevalent in North America is our sugar-rich diets. According to one report, “one in every five calories that Canadians consume comes from sugar”.4 Youth are among the highest consumers of sugar. Eggs are a wholesome food, free of sugar, and rich in vitamins and nutrients. Plus they can be cooked in so many delicious ways—the perfect option for reducing sugar intake.
4. Preventing an allergy
Eggs are such a healthy food choice, yet an egg allergy can prevent you from enjoying them for a lifetime. But introducing whole eggs early in a child’s diet can reduce their chances of developing an egg allergy. It’s one of the reasons why the latest infant feeding guidelines from Health Canada, the Canadian Pediatric Society, Dietitians of Canada, and the Breastfeeding Committee for Canada recommend introducing whole eggs as soon as six months of age, or as soon as your baby starts eating whole foods.
5. So many nutritional benefits
One of the great things about those new infant feeding guidelines is their implication for babies. From a nutritional perspective, eggs are simply an incredible food. Eggs are an excellent source of iron and are a nutritious source of protein, fat, Vitamins A, D, E, and B12, and choline.
Eggs offer so much to our children. They are at the core of a diet that will help them grow up healthy, strong, and smart. So do your best to feed your kids eggs. They’ll thank you one day… or they’ll thank you that day, when they love what you’ve cooked!
Source: eggfarmers.ca