Guest guest Posted September 22, 2001 Report Share Posted September 22, 2001 >Peter wrote: >> >>what's really annoyed me about the news coverage surrounding this - >> >> > The tragic death of Areni Manuelyan highlights the profound dangers of >> > letting ideology triumph over reality. >> >> As anyone who regularly read " The Vegan " will know, supposed nutritionists >> are notorious for not being able to give advice to parents on bringing up >> their children as vegans - their attitude always seems to be that it's >> impossible - I wonder if the nutritionists in this case gave any useful >> advice to the parents, or if they just told them it was impossible and let >> them get on with it? >> I passed this on to Stephen Walsh [colleague on VeganSoc council who replied to recent press stories] and got the following response. See final paragraph especially. (IVU is the International Vegetarian Union [see www.ivu.org - a huge website with thousands of recipes from around the world, all vegan, as well as a vast amount of other information]. The discussion group to which Stephen refers is for scientists only, but disseminates the results of its discussions to all.) Good wishes, Vanessa Stephen Walsh writes: First, it is the responsibility of parents to ensure that they feed their children adequately. The more untypical one's diet, the less effective mainstream nutritionists' advice will be, even with the best will in the world, and the more responsibility the parents must take on. Any mainstream nutritionist would have correctly diagnosed failure to thrive and would have highlighted concerns over B12, vitamin D, calories, protein and iron, and probably zinc and iodine. A good nutritionist should have suggested a shift to a mainstream vegan diet if they felt that the parents were commited primarily to veganism rather than to a raw diet. Such cases would be under the direction of a consultant paediatrician. If the paediatrician considered it impossible to arrange a suitable diet they would not have left the parents to get on with it but would have initiated care proceedings. Where any nutritionist would struggle is in explaining how to construct an appropriate 100% raw vegan diet for an infant. In recent discussions in the IVU science discussion group vegan nutritionists have debated whether this is possible, and if so how. Including a reliable source of B12 and calorie dense, moderate fibre foods were considered essential but not in themselves sufficient. Hopefully some clear guidelines will emerge from the ongoing discussions including input from raw food groups. Once there is a reasonable degree of consensus the conclusions will be disseminated widely. Stephen Walsh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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