Home > Food Label, News > General Mills Responds to Sugary-Cereal-for-Kids Report

General Mills Responds to Sugary-Cereal-for-Kids Report

October 29th, 2009 Leave a comment Go to comments

Yale University’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity presented a report on breakfast cereal this weekend  in Washington DC as part of the annual meeting of the Obesity Society. The findings were not surprising and can be summed up as follows: Manufacturers peddle sugary cereal to kids while painting these cereals as health to parents and nutritionists.

General Mill, one of the big four cereal manufacturers, responded with a letter to health professionals. Below is an excerpt and our commentary in bold:

October 27, 2009

Dear Colleague,

You may have seen or heard reports over the weekend about a cereal study conducted by the Rudd Center for Food and Policy. While the focus of the Rudd Center study is on advertising, it also seems to imply that kid-cereals are linked to obesity in children. We wanted to assure you that all General Mill’s Big G cereals continue to be nutritious and help children and adults maintain a healthy body weight while also meeting key nutrient requirements–this includes presweetened cereals.

Cereal remains a low-calorie, nutrient-dense food contributing positively to the overall nutritional status of children:
•    Kids who frequently eat cereal for breakfast have healthier body weights, have better nutritional status, and are less likely to have weight gain during adolescence.
And kids that eat less sweetened cereals probably do even better, don’t they?

•    Cereal is a lower calorie breakfast choice compared to many other foods at only 110-130 calories/serving (and that includes pre-sweetened cereals). Sugar is only 16 calories per teaspoon, does that mean kids 4-6 teaspoons of sugar for breakfast?

•    Cereal is nutrient dense and provides a good or excellent source of at least 10 key nutrients and very few calories. It is only an excellent source because of fortification. The vitamins and minerals are sprayed on the cereal and dissolve into the milk. If your child doesn’t consumer the milk, she does not take in all the nutrients. And who can tell us how bio-available each one of the nutrients is. Lastly, most Americans are not deficient in any of the fortification nutrients to begin with. They are deficient in fiber. Why do kids cereals range in the 0-3 grams when they could be 5or 6 grams worth per serving?

•    Overall, cereals—including presweetened cereals—provide less than 4% of a children’s sugar intake. And according to Coke’s CEO, so do soft drinks. And if we’ll ask Mars Inc CEO, they’ll also point the finger elsewhere. So if nobody is responsible for a big chunk of of our kids’ sugar intake, where is it all coming from?

Juli Hermanson, MPH, RD                    Tamara Schryver, PhD, RD
General Mills Bell Institute of Health and Nutrition    General Mills Bell Institute of Health and Nutrition

Lastly, don’t you get a strange feeling in your stomach when a food company sets up an “Institute of Health”?

What to do at the supermarket:

Breakfast is important. Breakfast cereals can be a great start to the day. But keep the sugar low (less than 6 grams per serving) and the fiber high (5 grams per serving and up).


Get Fooducated: RSS Subscription or Email Subscription

Follow us on twitter: twitter.com/fooducate

Help us test our new food comparison tool: alpha.fooducate.com

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
  1. October 29th, 2009 at 04:58 | #1

    Breakfast IS important! But, how did we ever get convinced that cold flakes or puffs in a box were beneficial for us? The history of Post & Kellogg cereals are a fun place to look for an answer to that question.

    Bottom line: boxed cereals are useless and seriously overpriced. All that packaging and processing sure isn’t very “green” either.

    Save money and your health: buy steel cut or rolled oats from the bulk aisle, pop it in your crock pot or rice cooker overnight and wake up to hot porridge in the morning instead.

  2. annie avery
    October 29th, 2009 at 06:22 | #2

    right on susan, and what ever happened to eggs, bacon, etcetera. sugar and starch-laced breakfasts just create that crash by noon. “at the supermarket: no packaging”; go for a protein-based breakfast, and wait! how about carrot sticks on the side! whole foods are best.

  3. October 30th, 2009 at 04:53 | #3

    Annie: Bravo for eggs and bacon! My colleague who is a behavioral, developmental pediatrician actually recommends bacon & eggs for his patients with focus and ADD issues. Fat is necessary for good brain function….our brains are 60% fat! What a tough message that one is for the American public: fat is a necessary nutrient!