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Bad diet 'cause of learning difficulties' for 200,000 pupils

UP TO 200,000 Scottish school pupils could have learning difficulties because of the country's love of junk food, researchers have claimed.

Eating fatty fry-ups, burgers and chips dramatically increases the chances of children suffering from learning difficulties, including dyslexia and autism, a conference in Edinburgh was told.

Dr Alex Richardson, a senior researcher at Oxford University, claimed that up to a quarter of the school-age population - which equates to about 200,000 pupils in Scotland - had some kind of learning problem.

She said that was probably caused by the lack of the vital omega-3 fatty acid - which is found in oily fish and dark green vegetables - in their parents' and grandparents' diets and what they serve up to children.

Dr Richardson said: "There's an old folk tale that says fish is good for the brain - it is. Ask any vet, who starts out with the same training as doctors, and their first line of treatment for physical or behavioural difficulty is nutrition."


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Wednesday 15 February 2012

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