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Junk Foods Widely Available At Elementary Schools, Study Shows

Junk Food Schools

By LINDSEY TANNER   02/ 6/12 04:01 PM ET  AP

CHICAGO -- Junk food remains plentiful at the nation's elementary schools despite widespread efforts to curb childhood obesity, a new study suggests.

Between 2006 and 2010, nearly half of public and private schools surveyed sold sweet or salty snack foods in vending machines or other places, the study found.

There was little change over the four years, a surprising finding given vocal advocacy campaigns to improve kids' diets, said researcher Lindsey Turner, a health psychologist at the University of Illinois at Chicago and the study's lead author.

The study focused on snacks not sold during mealtimes, which until recently weren't subject to government nutrition standards.

Schools most likely to sell chips, cookies or similar foods were in the South, where obesity rates are the highest; these foods were scarcest at schools in the West.

The results are concerning, Turner said, because they show that many schools have not heeded messages from health advocates including the Institute of Medicine, which in a 2007 report urged limiting availability of food in schools outside of mealtimes, and said these items should not be sugary, salty or fatty snack foods.

Many schools in the study also offered more healthy foods outside of mealtimes, including fruit and vegetables. But selling them along with junk food may tempt kids to skip the healthy options, and sends "mixed messages about healthful nutrition," Dr. Thomas Robinson, a Stanford University pediatrician and obesity prevention researcher.

Robinson called the study results "sobering" and said a key strategy for reversing childhood obesity includes improving nutrition in schools.

Recent data suggest that almost 20 percent of elementary school children nationwide are obese. Policies that limit junk food sold in schools have been linked with less obesity among students, said C. Tracy Orleans, a senior scientist at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which paid for the study.

The study appears in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, released Monday. Robinson wrote an accompanying editorial.

Anti-obesity advocates also have pushed to remove sugary sodas from schools, and some states and schools have enacted bans. Also, a 2010 report found a big decline in sales of these drinks to schools during some of the years studied.

The new study, which focused only on foods, is based on surveys mailed to principals at public and private elementary schools. Nearly 4,000 responded, or more than half of those contacted. The participating schools were nationally representative and there were no geographic or economic differences in schools that didn't respond that would affect the results, Turner said.

Overall, about 45 percent of schools sold sugary and salty snacks. Some schools sold low-fat salty snacks and baked goods, including pretzels and low-fat ice cream, but their high sugar or salt content makes them a poor choice, Turner said.

Candy, salty snacks and regular-fat baked goods were more common at private schools than public schools; and low-fat ice cream was more common at both types of schools than full-fat ice cream snacks.

The study authors say their results should encourage the U.S. Department of Agriculture to crack down on junk food in schools. A law enacted in December 2010, after the study ended, gives the agency authority to do so, and it is developing changes.

Before that measure, USDA policy restricted schools from selling foods "of minimal nutritional value" during mealtimes. Under the new law, the agency can set nutrition standards for all foods sold in U.S. schools.

Another USDA change announced last month focuses on making school lunches healthier, with changes including less sodium and more whole grains.

The changes affecting snack foods "need to be comprehensive, they need to be strong, they need to be specific," and they could be "a game-changer," said Orleans.

A website for the USDA's Food and Nutrition Service says restricting these foods can pose challenges for schools, because many rely on sales of snack foods to boost revenue. But it also explains why changes are needed.

"The constant availability of foods and beverages may increase the likelihood of impulse buying and contribute to overeating by some students," the USDA website says.

It lists states and school districts that have imposed some restrictions on these foods.

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CHICAGO -- Junk food remains plentiful at the nation's elementary schools despite widespread efforts to curb childhood obesity, a new study suggests. Between 2006 and 2010, nearly half of public and ...
CHICAGO -- Junk food remains plentiful at the nation's elementary schools despite widespread efforts to curb childhood obesity, a new study suggests. Between 2006 and 2010, nearly half of public and ...
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09:48 PM on 03/03/2012
When I had my truck, I though about loading it up with fruit and delivering it to a school. But there are so many rules about things, doubtless including the procedure for changing the lunch menu in a school cafeteria. It's too bad the schools have soda machines everywhere, they should all be getting lots of PE and Pellegrino.
07:26 PM on 02/22/2012
Kids are kids, and it really comes down to how a parent or other guardian raises them. Parents can have the control to watch what their kids eat. Serving healthy food at home is important, but teaching their kids to understand the importance of choosing healthy foods when it is purely up to the kid is necessary. It isn’t always the school place that can take all the blame, however I do think that more measures should be taken to provide todays elementary students with foods that are healthier and contain a higher content of nutritional ingredients. But on the other end It seems more that silly to have parents blame the school/school boards when parents are the ones who provide their kids with money to spend on junk food, either in a vending machine or from other kids.
07:11 PM on 02/22/2012
hhh
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trekie70
Lifelong bibliophile and political junkie
11:33 AM on 02/08/2012
I'm going show my age here but when I was in public school, at least in elementary and jr. high, there were no vending machines with sodas and snacks. I do recall a few machines at my HS but not a lot.

I feel like I'm beating a dead horse here but the key is providing nutritional information to consumers, be it a color coding system at the buffet or on the pkg. Why the "nanny-state whiners" can't see this is beyond me, as they seem to oppose ideas like this.
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sacmom3
ENOUGH! Remember the children of Sandy Hook
04:39 AM on 02/08/2012
Kids are gonna eat what kids want to eat. Junk food vending machines have been banned from my kids high school for years. My kids tell me there are kids that have side businesses selling junk food at school. There's the candy kids, the soda kids, and the ramen kids that sell stuff from their backpacks. I'm sure this is going on at schools across the country.
08:33 PM on 02/07/2012
get rid of the contracts with these junk food food companies.. enough sweet heeart deals at our childrens expense. how about real simple foods like rice, salads, fruit, cottage cheese, simple baked potato, what ever happened to soups, this is all about money and nothing to do with doing right by our children
05:08 PM on 02/07/2012
HEALTHY FOOD STARTS WITH HEALTHY PARENTS.
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ljkcan
I don't let geographical borders limit my thinking
01:16 AM on 02/09/2012
It starts with healthy cooking and healthy food choices.
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El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
04:41 PM on 02/07/2012
And the news gets even better...

FACT: With all these corporations swimming in big bucks marketing and selling high-fat / high-sugar / high-sodium substances (just to name three toxins out of many others in these products), consider this from the "Army Times" on Nov. 3, 2009: “U.S. military-age youth are increasingly unfit to serve — mostly because they’re in such lousy shape. [M]ore than one-third of the roughly 31.2 million Americans aged 17 to 24 are unqualified for military service because of physical and medical issues. And, according to Curt Gilroy, the Pentagon’s director of accessions, ‘The major component of this is obesity. We have an obesity crisis in the country. There’s no question about it.’” And such horror is far worse today...

ANALYSIS: Fast food companies, public schools, advertising & marketing agencies, vending machine operators, and undisciplined parents “combined”...are negatively impacting America’s national security readiness. That’s where all of this “madness” has gone.

(I know, I know: it's all George W.'s fault.)
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12:24 PM on 02/07/2012
...put the blame where it belongs: school boards, food services directors and principals...all over the country, pay for cafeteria workers has been slashed AND then padded by putting them in the position of re-charging their pay through the sales of junk foods as snacks...so, follow the money: who gets the REAL kickbacks from selling this stuff? School boards? Principals? Food services coordinators? And at the same time, school districts get to pay their cafeteria workers LESS in the bargain! Corruption, power and money at the top! If you stood in most cafeterias and watched how much GOOD food is thrown away every single day by students BEFORE they go to the junk food snack lines you would be disgusted! Follow the money!!! Parents and teachers are not exempt in this little game either...if they see what's happening and do NOTHING, then they are accessories to the problem.
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Uhgg
Just another Neanderthal
06:00 AM on 02/07/2012
Look at what you local school puts out for a daily lunch and you will see that most of it is junk food
03:58 AM on 02/07/2012
America is code for chemical enriched garbage food.. Thank you corporate food cartel.
03:40 AM on 02/07/2012
This does not surprise me, in a country where Pizza and fries is supposed to be a vegetable.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/18/us-usa-lunch-idUSTRE7AH00020111118
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gpop824
03:28 AM on 02/07/2012
These are kids. The problem is they are too damn lazy these days to just go outside and play. run around, play sports, have fun. They rather stay indoors, play video games, watch movies, get on a computer, and society wants to know why their is an obesity problem. I drive around my hometown and I never see kids outside playing anymore. No body plays touch football, baseball or basketball anymore. The playgrounds are mostly empty. If they were more active, they would burn those calories off. Do they still have Phys Ed in schools? If parents don't like what the schools are dishing out, pack your kid a lunch for school. Worked for us in my schools days.
03:41 AM on 02/07/2012
I am certain this generation will be the first to have a lower life expectancy than the previous generation.
10:18 AM on 02/07/2012
These kids are this way because there are a number of parents that DON'T care! Parents seem to think they don't need to parent anymore.
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Sheldon archer
Facebook name is Yuyun Archer
02:51 AM on 02/07/2012
"Give me a child and I'll give you the man." Got to start them off early.
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Mort
Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
02:49 AM on 02/07/2012
I always KNEW wheat bread wasn't good for you. And there it is... in a photo of junk foods!
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
04:30 AM on 02/07/2012
its split top wheat bread. which is basically white bread. whichin turn is garbage and minimal fiber but lots of glucose. yes that bread is not good for you. whole wheat is better
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dbrockskk
09:35 AM on 02/16/2012
but it has to say 100 per cent whole wheat
10:18 AM on 02/07/2012
Its whole grains that you need.