Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a question for your child’s doctor, who can assess your child’s BMI. Tall kids, muscular kids, and active kids need more calories than their short, sedentary counterparts. My kid ate like a toddler until puberty and was always the smallest in the class. Then started eating man portions at age 13.
As for the suggestion to pump your child full of protein to satiate them — no. Kids don’t actually need that much protein. And the obsession with blunting hunger with high protein diets in adults should not be transferred to children.
You don’t need a doctor to assess BMI. Doesn’t OP have access to a scale, a tape measure, and the internet?
Anonymous wrote:This is a question for your child’s doctor, who can assess your child’s BMI. Tall kids, muscular kids, and active kids need more calories than their short, sedentary counterparts. My kid ate like a toddler until puberty and was always the smallest in the class. Then started eating man portions at age 13.
As for the suggestion to pump your child full of protein to satiate them — no. Kids don’t actually need that much protein. And the obsession with blunting hunger with high protein diets in adults should not be transferred to children.
Anonymous wrote:Op - he will also eat things like full bowls of frozen blueberries or yogurt smoothies or chocolate protein shakes.
He is 4’4 and 60 pounds. I feel like he never stops eating.
Anonymous wrote:I would try and change up the breakfast slightly. Yogurt and fruit are fine, but try eggs instead of hash browns. More filling and more nutritious. Unless he has a late lunch at school he should be able to go breakfast to lunch without a snack.
Anonymous wrote:I think there’s something wrong with a mother keeping track of her kids daily food intake in such detail.