Womb Veggie Exposure Shapes Kids' Food Preferences

SkimNews Take
Early flavor exposure in utero may bypass learned resistance to new foods, leveraging a developmental window before children form strong preferences or aversions.
Get the Health newsletter
Daily health & science — research, biotech, public health, the studies worth knowing. Free.
- Prof Nadja Reissland of Durham University led a study showing that children exposed to specific vegetable flavors in the womb reacted more positively to those vegetables years later, tested via ultrasound before birth, at three weeks, and at three years old
- Pregnant participants took either kale or carrot powder capsules, and their children's reactions consistently favored the vegetable their mother had consumed — grimacing at the other
- Reissland said the implications point toward "a healthier population" and that the capsule approach could be cheaply distributed to pregnant women, with a larger study needed to confirm findings
- Co-authors Dr Beyza Ustun-Elayan of the University of Cambridge and Dr Benoist Schaal of France's CNRS said the results suggest flavors from the maternal diet "may quietly shape children's responses to foods years later"
- The research team, drawn from Durham, Cambridge, Aston, CNRS, and Dutch universities, published their findings in the journal Developmental Psychobiology; the study was funded by a grant from Aston University
- Reissland flagged artificial sweeteners in everyday products including toothpaste as an understudied source of fetal flavor exposure
Why it matters: If validated in a larger trial, the intervention is cheap — vegetable powder capsules given in late pregnancy — and could shape lifelong food preferences, potentially easing the public-health problem of childhood vegetable refusal. The study's own authors, however, acknowledged a small sample size and called for much bigger funded research before any clinical recommendation.




