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Working Moms Counter Study Claiming Their Kids Are Unhealthy

Parents Who Work Say Their Kids Have Healthy Diets and Adequate Exercise

After examining 12,572 five-year-old British kids, the Institute of Child Health found three major bad habits among children of working moms: They drink more sugary beverages between meals, watch TV or use the computer at least two hours a day and they get less exercise.

Parents dispute study claiming kids of working moms are less healthy.

The study seems to confirm many working moms' worst fears, sparking controversy and heated debates in the never-ending mommy wars.

ABC News correspondent JuJu Chang, a working mother of three boys ages 9, 6 and 2, sat down with a panel of four working mothers.

Meet the Moms

Margarita Miranda-Abate, 41, a public relations manager with a 5-year-old boy.

Sherrie Matusz, 37, a media relations executive with four children all under the age of 7.

Lamonia Brown, 40, a single mom and an event planner with two grown kids and a 12-year-old.

Sarah Welch, 37, a business owner with a 3-year-old boy and an infant.

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JUJU CHANG: I think this report sort of confirms what every working mom fears, right? Secret fear is, "Oh, my kids would be better off if I were at home."

MARGARITA MIRANDA-ABATE: You know, my first reaction was, "Why do we need to even go there?" I mean, why do we need to pit working moms against stay-at-home moms? That was my first thought. Because at this point, we should be beyond that. Either we have a choice or some women don't have a choice to work.

SARAH WELCH: My first reaction was [that] it tripped every guilt trigger that I have. I think the headline was something like, "Working mothers' children unfit." I was like, "Did I just read 'Working mothers unfit?' Working mothers unfit for children?" Then I was, sort of, "Oh, my God, am I hurting my child by choosing to work?"

SHERRIE MATUSZ: You don't need to be with your kids every minute for them to be healthy and happy.

LAMONIA BROWN: OK, here we go again. You got another thing that working mothers do to harm their kids. Please give me a break. I wanted to see: OK, where did this data come from? What are they basing this on? There are so many things that make kids unhealthy, it cannot possibly be that I go to work.

CHANG: This study doesn't say the kids are unhealthy; it highlights specific unhealthy habits that can promote weight gain. The data is based on working mothers' self-reporting, and dads are not included in the study.

MIRANDA-ABATE: I think the biggest pitfall for working moms, or for any parents, in keeping them healthy, is just time. I do the best I can. I'm a very involved parent.

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