John Dorschner (2013), a reporter for the Miami Herald, notes, “the
percentage of kids aged 6-11 who are obese has more than doubled in
the past three decades, according to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Obese adolescents aged 12-19 have more than
tripled.” This staggering statistic more than causes concern for
the future health of our children, and awareness of the issue has
risen across the nation. With high importance of education being
placed on our children, and the booming enjoyment of computers,
phones, and video games all contributing to the sedentary lifestyles
of kids, action is being focused towards their diets.
Bringing a home-packed lunch to school to control what is eaten is a good way to control the caloric intake of our youth. However, this may not be possible for all children. Financial situations are tight, and many parents
rely on schools to feed their children during the day. The federal
government launched a new campaign in 2010 to strengthen the
nutritional requirements for school lunches in an effort to help all
kids who rely on, or simply purchase, food from school cafeterias eat healthier.
This bill, dubbed the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, went into
near-full effect in many schools in September, 2013 (it's implementation has been ongoing since 2010). This act
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| Lunch Time! |
“required schools to limit lunches to no more than 650 calories for
elementary kids, 700 for middle schoolers, and 850 for high
schoolers. Students must be offered a vegetable, a fruit, a low-fat
or non-fat milk, a protein, and a grain. They must pick at least
three, one of which must be a vegetable or a fruit. A student also
could satisfy the fruit or veggie requirement by choosing a juice
without added sugar" (Dorschner, 2013).
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| Eat Healthier at school |
The requirements are strict, but they put a maximum on how much
children can eat. It is a hope to cut down on the daily caloric
intake of our youth in hopes of eventually contributing to weight
loss. Moreover, the act hopes to improve the dietary behaviors of
children. The students have a model of what they should be eating,
and how much they should be eating with the strict guidelines on what
they are served. This hopes to create health-conscientious children who would rather eat healthier meals.
Nanci Hellmich (2012) of the USA Today writes, “nationally,
about a third (31.8%) of kids and adolescents, ages 2 to 19, are
obese or overweight, government statistics show. About 17% of
them—about 12.5 million kids—are obese.” Nutritional
improvements in what our children eat, be it a brown-bag lunch or
food purchased from the school cafeteria, could help reverse the
nation's obesity epidemic amongst our children. Parents and schools
need to team together to model and promote healthy eating habits for
the kids. The future health of our children is at stake.


I also read on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website that more than one third of children and adolescents were overweight or obese in the year 2010. Additionally, schools play a critical role in this hot topic since they have the ability to "[establish] a safe and supportive environment with policies and practices that support healthy behaviors [while providing] opportunities for students to learn about and practice healthy eating and physical activity behaviors." I think this is bill is a great initiative to help combat obesity, as well as a great preventative measure for numerous health issues obese individual face futuristically, such as heart disease, type 2 diabetes, stroke, several types of cancer, and osteoarthritis. It will be interesting to see both the short and long term effects of this initiative!
ReplyDeleteSource: http://www.cdc.gov/healthyyouth/obesity/facts.htm