Childhood obesity and school lunches: how to put your child’s lunch under remote control
Website design By BotEap.comThe School Lunch Program: Parents Relinquish Control of Kids’ Meals to the Federal Government and School Boards
Website design By BotEap.com“The reason kids are too fat now is, in part, because they used to be too skinny” – The School Lunch Programs
Website design By BotEap.comSchool time, including going to and from school, dominates a child’s or adolescent’s day. The control parents have at home evaporates once the school bus leaves and doesn’t return for eight or more hours. After school hours become dangerous times to eat and drink due to the fatigue and low blood sugar experienced by many children and adolescents. It is easy for the parent who is also tired and often overwhelmed to give the child one of the bad snacks he has seen on television. Whether it’s the wrong school breakfast, bad school lunches, and the school-sponsored vending machine, parents have relinquished control of children’s and teens’ food and drink not only to the school but to their 7-year-old as well.
Website design By BotEap.comThe school lunches offered to your children may differ between school districts, areas of the country, or whether the school is public or private. Some schools only have cafeterias and provide the standardized school lunches, while other schools also have a la carte food items, fast food kiosks, or even student stores. Comparing what large groups of kids end up eating for lunch reveals twice the fat of cafeteria lunches compared to sack lunches (lunches brought from home). Total fat and calories are even higher when students purchase meals a la carte because they often choose two, three, or more items, and often the “wrong” items..
Website design By BotEap.comWhere the school lunch programs started:
Website design By BotEap.comMalnourished and malnourished families and children began to become widespread in the US in the 1930s. Recruits during World War II were regularly turned away because they were malnourished. Seeing this problem, President Harry S. Truman in 1946 launched the School Lunch Program, guaranteeing a hot lunch to all schoolchildren who could not afford it. Thus began a plan that would contribute 60 years later to the obesity epidemic we see today!
Website design By BotEap.comChanging School Lunch Programs:
Website design By BotEap.comThe programs have changed over the years, and free and reduced-cost breakfasts were added during the 1960s. The government is in the business of supplying school food, buying surplus produce from farmers and sending it to schools. School lunches tend to exceed the national recommendations for fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, and calories. While the quality has improved somewhat in recent years, fresh fruits and vegetables are generally lacking. A sample of 24 public middle schools in San Diego County, CA. found that nearly 50% of students at a school with a student store or a la carte service bought mostly candy, cakes, and cookies and significantly fewer servings of fruits and vegetables.
Website design By BotEap.comSchool Lunch Program Scoop:
Website design By BotEap.comHere is the 2005 USDA Food and Nutrition Service presentation titled “School Meal Program Performance: What Do We Know?”
Website design By BotEap.como 94,622 schools (90% of public schools) participated in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) serving 49 million students
Website design By BotEap.como School cafeterias served 4.8 billion lunches.
Website design By BotEap.como NSLP serves more than 29 million lunches, 9 million breakfasts, and 154 million after-school snacks
Website design By BotEap.como Approximately half of all lunches and 3/4 of all breakfasts are served free.
Website design By BotEap.comChildren from low-income families can receive more than half of their daily caloric intake from these foods. Fresh fruits and vegetables are not commonplace in homes and can become a stable of school lunches. Nutrition education could provide students with the tools they need to make healthy decisions regarding food and physical activity.
Website design By BotEap.comPointless school lunches vs. Packing a lunch from home:
Website design By BotEap.comChildren, adolescents and their parents can buy their lunch at school or bring it from home. The choice should depend on what results in children getting the right foods for lunch. The typical school lunch is often much higher in calories, carbohydrates, and fat than it should be. It means parents need to take a close look at cafeteria lunch menus that in most school districts are available for a week or two ahead. Here’s what to look for in your school lunch:
- What to eat: sandwichessandwiches, wraps, vegetables, fresh fruits, yogurts
- What to drink: water, low-fat or fat-free milk, zero calories, fruit-flavored waters
- What NOT to eat: fried foods, meat, pasta, pizza, rice or potatoes
- What NOT to drink: whole milk, sugar-filled juices, soft drinks, sports drinks