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Students Aren't Eating Healthy School Lunches, Despite Availability
Medical Daily ^ | November 18, 2014 | By Samantha Olson

Posted on 11/18/2014 11:38:54 AM PST by Oldeconomybuyer

Getting fresh fruits and vegetables onto lunch trays in public schools was only half the battle, because it turns out most kids still aren’t eating them. Researchers from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, studied students’ eating habits and found nearly six out of 10 won’t even touch a healthy food option on their plate.

"We have been thinking that if young children choose healthy food, they will eat it," said the study’s co-author Dr. Susan M. Gross, a research associate at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in a press release. "But our research shows that is not necessarily so."

Researchers watched 274 kids in kindergarten, and first and second grade, in 10 different New York City public school cafeterias, and noted their food selection and eating habits. They waited to see how many 6- to 8-year-olds would choose a fruit, vegetable, whole grain, low-fat milk, and lean protein to place on their tray. Researchers took photos of each tray, which revealed all of them took a milk and whole grain, 75 percent of the kids chose a protein, 59 percent chose a vegetable, and 58 percent chose a fruit. But did they eat it?

Not really. Only 75 percent of the kids took at least a bite of their protein and 24 percent ate one bite of their vegetables.

(Excerpt) Read more at medicaldaily.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: failure; lunchlady; mooch; obama
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To: txhurl
They piss me off, but also make want to go shopping! Trying to decide which three mushrooms to use.

They must be huge if three of them will feed a school. Or maybe only those with Secret Service firepower can force their way to the front of the line to get the soup.

21 posted on 11/18/2014 12:15:44 PM PST by KarlInOhio (The IRS: either criminally irresponsible in backup procedures or criminally responsible of coverup.)
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To: wbill
What a tortured, self-imposed hell they create for themselves. :-)

Indeed, this 2:00 min Portlandia episode proves it.

22 posted on 11/18/2014 12:16:19 PM PST by PROCON (Always give 100%...unless you're donating blood.)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer

The federal government should stay out of the catering business. Local school districts are better at it.


23 posted on 11/18/2014 12:16:26 PM PST by pallis
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To: wbill

‘What an idiot. To think that you and I are paying taxes to support her makes me irate.’

She is an “Educated Idiot” The worst kind of Idiot there is!


24 posted on 11/18/2014 12:17:55 PM PST by Autonomous User (No 18 Holes after a Head Rolls.)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer

Y’all might drum me out of FR, but I’m with The Mooch on this. Kids eat junk, which impacts their health and costs the taxpayers billions down the line in healthcare costs.

But if they’re going to clean up the school lunch program, they’re going to have to forbid kids to watch TV, which blasts them 24/7 with appealing ads for sugar-and-fat laden cereal, candy, ice cream, cake, pie, donuts, jelly, , etc etc etc.

I managed to raise two kids without loading them up with garbage, but I was the TERRIBLE mother who would not have TV in the house.

If school lunches are going to appeal to today’s brainwashed kids, they’ll have to be seriously delicious….plus, perhaps, accompanied by classes in nutrition from the beginning. Ten minutes a day. Five.

Oh dear, a massive government program? Or just parents wising up?


25 posted on 11/18/2014 12:28:09 PM PST by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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To: Sacajaweau
This way, they only have one bad day”

Lovely.

26 posted on 11/18/2014 12:31:32 PM PST by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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To: PROCON
Hilarious video. And sadly, not too far from the truth.

Some years ago, noted activist and fruitcake, Mary Tyler Moore, wrote an editorial about the evils of people eating lobster. They're caught, and boiled alive, and torn apart, and consumed, you see. Often with butter, which is a whole 'nother topic for discussion.

In the editorial, she posited a reality with happy, well-adjusted lobsters, free from fear of the lobster trap, where they walk claw-in-claw into the sunset.

Seriously, that's what she wrote. I gave it to my buddy who worked at the local lobster pound. He, and all of the hard-bitten lobstermen, got quite a chuckle out of it. :-)

27 posted on 11/18/2014 12:32:09 PM PST by wbill
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To: Little Bill

What crime did the chickens commit that your Granny executed?


28 posted on 11/18/2014 12:34:31 PM PST by right way right (America has embraced the suck of Freedumb.)
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To: pallis

What each school needs is a lunch lady standing at the place you deposit your tray. Our lunch ladies were big scary women who examined the contents of your tray and told you if you were finished or not. If she said eat more of your vegetables that there are children starving in China who would eat those vegetables, while she waved that huge metal spoon at you, you went back to your table and ate more of your vegetables.


29 posted on 11/18/2014 12:40:33 PM PST by Elyse (I refuse to feed the crocodile.)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
"We have been thinking that if young children choose healthy food, they will eat it,"

Liberal logic in a nut shell. "If we put it on their plates, that means they chose it".

30 posted on 11/18/2014 12:53:19 PM PST by Graybeard58 (Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man. Eccl 12 V.13)
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To: Graybeard58

if they force them to choose either spinach or broccoli they will eat it?

really stupid logic


31 posted on 11/18/2014 12:53:57 PM PST by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: wbill

They take it to make the adult happy and then don’t eat it.
It is like the kids taking the flyer offered to them to shut up someone before dumping it in the trash.


32 posted on 11/18/2014 12:57:24 PM PST by tbw2
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To: Veto!

Mothers like you and I are a rarity, I think. My kids were raised without TV for the most part, and they were raised rurally where we grew our own garden, processed the foods which came from it, raised our own small animals for meat, picked fruit from trees etc..

Any sweets that they consumed were for the most part, cookies or pies that I made for them, and I made them to be as healthy as I could. Healthy doesn’t mean tasteless, either.

I limited the amount of junk foods they could consume.

Diet is a habit. People enjoy and eat heartily, what they are accustomed to eating. My kids were accustomed to garden grown veggies, tree fresh/pesticide free fruits, nuts and berries. They loved a roast with potatoes and broccoli, gravy made from the roast, home made bisquits and a side salad, with a mixed fruit salad for desert.

Conversely, my sister’s kids were used to pizza and hotdogs, burgers and fries, boxed mac n cheese, stove top lasagna from the box etc. So, when they came to my house for Sunday dinner, they hardly ate at all! Over the years, they became more accustomed to our style of dinners, so by the time they were middle aged adults, they knew what a healthy diet was.

My kids were trained/raised on good food and that’s what they provided for their kids, too. To this day, all of them love healthy foods.

One year when they were little, I decided to drive home the point of eating good food before indulging in sweets. It was Christmas I think, and I didn’t insist on a good breakfast before diving into the candy in their stockings. I just let them have at it. It wasn’t long however before they all complained about feeling sick, and needing a decent meal lol!

As I said, I LIMITED the junk food, but you’ve GOT to allow a little for the head’s sake. Therefore, the junk didn’t settle well. From then on, when ever the school had parties loaded with junk foods, my kids made sure they filled up on a good lunch before eating the sweets. It was soo funny when they came home proudly announcing how they made sure to eat a good lunch so that they wouldn’t feel sick on junk foods.

Back in those days, their school made wonderful lunches and the kids could eat as much as they wanted. I don’t believe in limiting natural fats such as what comes on meats and eggs and dairy. I think kids need those extra calories if they’re active, and mine were. Kids who don’t like fats will cut it off the meat themselves.

Today, that same school won’t allow the kids to have a butter knife, and they have to eat with spoons. They can’t even butter their dinner roll, or have any salt/seasoning for their foods. They aren’t allowed seconds and portions are carefully controlled. The food still tastes very good, but it’s still a step down from what they used to produce.

Growing up, I was always amazed by what the other kids threw away. Our school made fantastic food, but I can’t believe what went into the trash cans.

Kids are kids meaning they are unique individuals from a variety of home styles and you are NOT going to please them all. But, there ARE some things that a large amount of the kids are going to like such as pizza and burgers. Those can be made to be healthy which doesn’t mean they have to be ‘weird’ or tasteless.

Portion control for children is stupid. They will eat as much or as little as they are comfortable with. Some kids are chow hounds, some kids aren’t. I knew one school which only allowed one tablespoon of food per year of age. That was IT! My 7 month old would eat a full cup and a half of food easily, and was a slender child! Others would eat half that and be rolly pollys.

One size doesn’t fit all. But I do believe the govt is training these kids for near starvation rations.


33 posted on 11/18/2014 1:01:03 PM PST by PrairieLady2
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To: Veto!

Thunder thighs wouldn’t eat the crap she has insisted the schools serve-to your point, the cafeteria meals are neither attractive nor tasty-what few veggies there are look overcooked/canned and bland-all the nutrients cooked out, and no seasonings.

The protein is mostly mystery meat-some chopped and processed garbage I would not feed to my pets, and there is too much starch on the menu-packaged potatoes, packaged bread, pasta, etc. Also, kids do not to be drinking milk all the time-it is not the best nutrition for an older child-natural cheese, yogurt and such are better. Most of the lunches are brought already prepared to the school from off-site now and just warmed in the microwave-I don’t think there are any more “real” kitchens where the cafeteria ladies cook...

I don’t eat processed food, never served it at home, and packed my kid’s lunch so she didn’t eat the stuff in the cafeteria-it was different from Michelle’s menu, but it was still processed garbage with little nutritional value. She learned to eat healthy food, and ignored the TV commercials-I never forbade her from seeing them-just made sure she knew that stuff was bad to eat, and didn’t keep it in the house.


34 posted on 11/18/2014 1:11:49 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: PrairieLady2

I grew up on a ranch, and my husband and I lived in a rural setting most of the time. I think rural living is healthy living, because you do learn to eat the healthy, fresh food-it still happens out here...


35 posted on 11/18/2014 1:16:33 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer

Maybe the schools could hire brown-shirted “Meal Coaches” or “Nutrition Advisors” and station them two to a table. If they observed a “recalcitrant consumer,” they could apply a “collapsible persuasive device” to the side of the child’s cranium before assisting them to a “quiet room” where they could contemplate the joys of eating their bran muffins, quinoa, and kale.


36 posted on 11/18/2014 1:40:49 PM PST by IronJack
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To: PrairieLady2
Kids are kids meaning they are unique individuals from a variety of home styles and you are NOT going to please them all. But, there ARE some things that a large amount of the kids are going to like such as pizza and burgers. Those can be made to be healthy which doesn’t mean they have to be ‘weird’ or tasteless.

A couple of fun examples. When I went to middle school we would make fun of the pizza they served, and would often pour the grease off the top of the pizza. My favorite dish to make for Pot Luck dinners is a traditional Jewish dish called Kugel, I tend to get one of two reactions: "What is that?" and "I want some".

37 posted on 11/18/2014 1:48:02 PM PST by Fraxinus (My opinion, worth what you paid.)
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To: PrairieLady2

What wonderful post. I wish I’d been your neighbor when we raised our really well-nourished kids. I didn’t get a lot of support, but stuck with it. Of course my son managed to come home now and then with junk food wrappers in his pockets. I didn’t make an issue of it.


38 posted on 11/18/2014 2:35:42 PM PST by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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To: Elyse
.. while she waved that huge metal spoon at you ..

Having that same memory, we must both be of 'a certain age'    d:^)

(not askin', mind, just sayin' .. lol)

39 posted on 11/18/2014 2:45:17 PM PST by tomkat (cynicism helps fight truth decay)
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To: Texan5
-I don’t think there are any more “real” kitchens where the cafeteria ladies cook…

I didn't realize that. Canned and bland veggies are worse than none at all.

When my kids were 5 and 6, I took them to the produce department of the grocery store and announced that we were going to try every vegetable, from A to Z. They said bleh and made faces, but were at least interested in the idea…and as it turned out, I could hardly move them beyond ARTICHOKE, as they both really loved them…Zucchini too, and almost everything between.

The one thing I could not make appealing was liver, no matter what I did with it, how I cooked it, or what I said about it. "This is peacock liver, favorite of the emperor of China," brought giggles but no cooperation. I really enjoy liver, but they didn't have to. No point in pushing against the tide.

40 posted on 11/18/2014 2:45:45 PM PST by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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