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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not understand why most people in the UK give their toddlers and small children 'diet' drinks? Is it a fad?

242 replies

Bellarosa1234 · 24/07/2016 15:52

I have lived in the UK for several years and now have a toddler DD. I have noticed all my English friends feed their toddlers diet drinks? Like robinsons squash, supermarket no added sugar squash, no added sugar flavoured waters etc. Am I missing something? Why do toddlers and children need diet drinks? When I lived at home we would dilute fresh fruit juices at meal times for the children? I did that infront of a friend and she made me feel like a bad mother. She said fruit juice is bad and full or sugar? I went to have a look at some "squash" in the supermarket and it seems like it is a con? My friend said it was kind for children's teeth but it still has fruit juice and added acid. Am I missing something? Obviously I want to do my best by my children but I just can't understand why people think diet drinks are great for kids, can anyone enlighten me? Thanks in advance!

OP posts:
Dontyoulovecalpol · 28/07/2016 08:55

Grin sorry basic. That was my pre caffeine misreading

Craigie · 28/07/2016 12:15

ALL juice is bad for kids teeth, and ANYTHING carbonated (including fizzy water) is even worse for the enamel. If you're going to use juice, make sure it's with food.

squoosh · 28/07/2016 12:22

No.

Carbonated water has more of an impact on tooth enamel than still water but it's not the same as drinking sugary fizzy drinks.

squoosh · 28/07/2016 12:24

And fruit juice is far more acidic than sparkling water.

whois · 28/07/2016 12:54

I'll take artificial sweeteners over 'natural' sugar any day... plenty of evidence sugar is the new killer. Not so much for artificial sweeteners.

Probably better to avoid both tho but I do like a pint of very weak squash after sport :-)

whois · 28/07/2016 12:58

I don't know any adult who drinks squash

Conversely, almost all of my friends drink squash or cordial. Not all the time, but almost everyone has it in.

It isn't something you crack out at a dinner party tho is it? More like something you offer "tea, coffee, water, squash" when a close friend has popped in.

squoosh · 28/07/2016 12:59

Growing evidence that the body can't tell the difference between sugar and some artificial sweeteners.

minatiae · 28/07/2016 13:14

of course adults drink squash

if you think adults don't and children shouldn't, who do you think squash if for? Hmm

squoosh · 28/07/2016 13:20

I can't remember when an adult last offered me a glass of squash. Possibly when I was playing in my friend's house circa 1988.

IceRoadDucker · 28/07/2016 13:21

Hahaha at all the people afraid of "chemicals". Oh, the ignorance.

mrsvilliers · 28/07/2016 13:24

Have not RTFT (10 pages on squash!) but I think is also a regional thing. We recently moved from London (where I'd forgotten squash existed) to the Midlands where it is served everywhere. Ds can't stand it so I am always that mother asking for water Grin

However I can't stand the taste or smell of aspartame so I don't buy diet drinks for that reason. Dc have water or milk or if very hot then juice. I buy the four packs of innocent smoothies every so often and when they're gone they're gone. DPs were pretty strict on juice and sweets when I was growing up and to date I have no fillings so I am following their lead.

mrsvilliers · 28/07/2016 13:24

Also thanks to pp for history of squash, v interesting!

FankEweVeryMuch · 28/07/2016 13:34

My issue with sweeteners is that they are a processed food. A few years ago salt was the enemy, now it's sugar. I don't disspute that a huge amount of either is good for you but sugar is the current 'evil food'

FankEweVeryMuch · 28/07/2016 13:36

Posted too soon-
So with that in mind I stick to what I know as fact. Los of healthy food in as close to it's natural form as possible.

Sweetners are the epitome of processed so I'm not giving them to my children daily. I'd prefer a small amount of sugar. That is processed but can be traced back.

This is how I work it out in my mind. Less processed, more healthy. Might not be right but it feels so to me.

Pythonesque · 28/07/2016 14:37

Haven't read the full thread but absolutely agree that the prevalence of artificial sweeteners in the UK is very worrying. I go out of my way to try to find the drinks that don't contain them, can no longer buy suitable lemon squash at all which was a family favourite. I'd much rather see something marketed as "no artificial additives" than "no added sugar"!

Rockingaround · 28/07/2016 20:31

Here here Python. Yes I don't know how bad artificial sweeteners are, I just don't trust em. Would much rather sugar in small amounts. I can taste the difference, I can taste a sweetener in anything. Some cake mixes even have it and there's some god awful popcorn too that you can microwave and just tastes like sweetener. "No artificial additives" should be a thing.

mathanxiety · 30/07/2016 03:30

Mi Wadi is an Irish brand of squash.

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