"The key is to make sure it's well planned out and you're meeting all of your child's nutritional needs," said Vandana Sheth, a registered dietician nutritionist and a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
Many vegans cite animal welfare and personal health as reasons to avoid animal byproducts, such as dairy, eggs and gelatin. Plant-based diets are associated with a lower risk of some chronic diseases as well as environmental benefits.
Reed Mangels, a registered dietician in California and nutrition adviser for the Vegetarian Resource Group who raised her children on vegan diets, said that vegan babies, like all infants, should start with breast milk if possible. Where breastfeeding is not possible, a soy-based formula — which, unlike plain soy milk, is specially formulated for babies — can be a good option, though Mangels pointed out that some formulas contain derivatives of lanolin, an animal byproduct.
Sheth said it was important for caretakers to make sure that vegan babies, once weaned, got enough of vitamins D and B12, calcium, iron, zinc and heart-healthy fats. The same is true for all babies, but these nutrients are worth paying special attention to for vegans and vegetarians. She added that vitamin B12, in particular, comes predominantly from animal products.
"So if you don't have B12 coming from animal products, you want to make sure you're supplementing it," she said. Many fortified foods for infants include B12, along with other essential nutrients, like iron and calcium.
Sheth recommended introducing vegan children to a range of foods, starting with breast milk or formula and perhaps mixing that with fortified cereals before moving on to soft options, like puréed fruits, bean spreads, mashed avocados and tofu, then eventually adding more solid options, like whole wheat breads and cooked and dried fruits.
According to a report published by Global Data, 6 per cent of US consumers claimed to be vegan in 2017, up from 1 per cent in 2014.
Sheth and Mangels said they had noticed a growing interest in diets that included more plants and less meat. Some children are even making the decision to eat this way on their own.
"Many kids do thrive on vegan diets," Mangels said, adding that parents who were considering raising their children that way should work with health care providers to come up with a plan.
"Many dieticians know about vegan diets and are open to it," she said. "Just seek out good quality information so that you can feel like what you're doing is healthy."
When child malnutrition cases make headlines, they often can involve factors beyond just an avoidance of animal products. In the Australian case, the judge said the parents were "initially unable to accept that their daughter's condition was due to malnutrition," the BBC reported.
In 2016, a woman in Pennsylvania was charged with endangering the welfare of her child. In that case, family members told CBS Pittsburgh that she had essentially been feeding the baby only nuts and berries.
In May, the Royal Academy of Medicine in Belgium released a report that said that vegan diets were unsuitable for children and that young people could suffer irreversible harm if they lacked nutrients like vitamins D and B12.
That report came two years after a mother and a father in Belgium were sentenced to jail over the death of their 7-month-old son, whom they had fed a diet of vegetable-based milk, the BBC reported. But some doctors objected to the academy's report.
A letter from the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit group in the United States that promotes plant-based diets, said that "several key statements and conclusions were not based on scientific evidence and were both erroneous and misleading."
Written by: Jacey Fortin
© 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES