10 August 2016 From the section Europe
Such parents, the draft bill claims, are imposing a diet "devoid of
essential elements for [children's] healthy and balanced growth".
It has been proposed by Elvira Savino of the centre-right Forza Italia party.
It follows a number of high-profile Italian cases where malnourished children have been taken into care.
In four cases over the last 18 months, malnourished children were hospitalised in Italy after being fed a vegan diet.
However, dieticians such as the American Dietetic Association say vegan diets are suitable for children
but advise that care needs to be taken to ensure children are receiving
the full range of required nutrients - in particular vitamin B12.
Doctors
speculated in some cases that the guardians of the hospitalised
children may not have understood how to supplement a vegan diet to make
it safe for children.
What is veganism?
A vegan diet eliminates anything which originates from animals:
- No meat, fish, animal fats or gelatine
- No dairy products such as cow's milk, cheese, butter, yogurt, goat's or sheep's milk
- No eggs, nor foods containing eggs, such as most Quorn products
- No honey
Ms
Savino's proposed bill will be discussed by parliamentary committees
before going to the chamber for debate - probably later this year,
reports Reuters news agency.
Meanwhile, three rival bills are on
the table - all aiming to make vegan and vegetarian options more
commonplace in Italian canteens.
'Reckless and dangerous'
In the preamble of Ms Savino's bill (in Italian), she highlights the spreading belief in Italy of "substantial health benefits" provided by a vegetarian or vegan diet.
"There
is no objection if the person making this choice is an informed adult.
The problem arises when children are involved... The vegetarian or vegan
diet is, in fact, deficient in zinc, iron, vitamin D, vitamin B12 and
omega-3".
Her draft bill aims to "stigmatise the reckless and
dangerous eating behaviour imposed by parents" who pursue a vegan diet,
"to the detriment of minors".
Offenders would face up to a year in
jail - rising to a maximum of four years where the child suffers
illness or permanent injury and six years in the case of death.
While
some nutrition experts have challenged the validity of the bill, other
commentators have cautioned that its imprecise wording means it could be
used to penalise a far greater range of parents than vegans or
vegetarians - for instance, the parents of obese children.
Some say better public health education rather than punitive measures would be more effective at improving children's nutrition. BBC
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