The numerousness of child obesity in the US is at an unequaled high with about 33% of all kids and teenagers now viewed as overweight or fat (Ogden et al 2008). Impressive consideration has been centered on schools trying to distinguish approach levers that will switch the weight pestilence. Specifically, the accessibility of "aggressive foods", characterized as nourishments and refreshments accessible or being able to buy in schools, outside of the school lunch and breakfast, has been a highly talked about issue. From one perspective, adversaries address the nourishing estimation of focused sustenance and think of them as the essential wellspring of "junk" in schools The candy machine organizations are not excited about conceivable limitations, contending that the candy machines are now loaded with healthy items and that those choices ought not be banned. "we are somewhat worried that they may make the principles excessively stringent," said James A. McCarthy, president of the Snack Food Association, an exchange bunch in Washington, as reported by the New York Times. Nutritionists discussed that candy machines in schools are loaded with snacks like potato chips, treats and soft drinks, and that all the foods that are healthy for you are truly difficult to find. However, that is on the grounds that the candy machines ' choices are regularly construct more with respect to what will profit instead of what is sound. Some schools are contending that excessively strict
Schools do a “good” job in promoting certain healthy foods in their cafeterias. Yes, students do not enjoy eating them but it is for their good. The fact that schools sell the “baked” chips is a good and a bad idea. It is a good idea because they are healthier than the regular chips sold in grocery stores and smaller than regular sizes. The bad part comes to the fact that they are still being sold and most students prefer to purchase them instead of fruits. In my case, I know I would prefer to eat those chips instead of the fruits. Vending machines are rarely seen in schools but the schools that do have them do not have healthy items inside. Sodas and junk snacks are what are mostly seen in those vending machines along with others. Students
Due to overweight students in many schools teachers decide to remove vending machines . But that doesn't stop students from buying snacks from
Schools that sell snacks from vending machines tend to make a lot of money from the vending. Students buying from vending machines gave nearly ⅓ of high schools and middles schools a profit of $1,000-$9,999 (Datar and Nicosa 7). Schools that focus on the ban of junk food lack the funding for gym classes and after-school sports (Carson-Dewitt and Jacobs 15). Schools when they have a healthier food options, students tend to turn down the option. This is seen in article Some School Districts Quit Healthier Lunch Program, the author, Carolyn Thompson states “After just one year, some schools around the country are dropping out of the healthier new federal lunch program, complaining that so many students turned up their noses at meals packed with whole grains, fruits and vegetables that the cafeterias were losing money.” (1). This shows that the sell of food from vending machines at schools help give the school more funding and it allows
You may be familiar with recent regulation, which was initiated for the 2014-15 school year, where the United States Department of Agriculture enforced regulatory guidelines on food items sold in schools across the nation. Although there was previously a nutritional requirement for food in school, as Marion Nestle, a Professor of Nutrition at New York University, points out in her very influential article of the time, “this requirement [did] not apply to foods sold outside of school cafeterias in snack bars, school stores, or vending machines" (Nestle 308). Many proponents of the recent regulation are astonished that such regulation was not in place from the beginning. Unfortunately, this action was influenced by an ever-rising concern for the obesity rate in the US population, and not a desire to proactively encourage a healthy lifestyle.
Parents scan campaign for the elimination of vending machines on school property so students are encouraged to pack their own healthier snacks.
Childhood obesity has become an ongoing issue in the U.S. and over the years has been classified as a growing epidemic. By understanding which individuals are deeply impacted by obesity, policy makers can shape policies to address it. In a survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), revealed that between the period of 1976- 1980, and 2007-2008, obesity has more than doubled among adults, and more that tripled among children and young adults (Barnes, M. 2010), as show in Figure 1. Childhood obesity and mal nutrition cannot be linked back to one specific cause. It is combination of the food that is being given to students at school, and the lack of physical and educational programs within the system. On June 4, 1946 President Truman signed into law the first National School Lunch Program that provided low-cost or free school lunch meals
When you get a small break and you run to the vending machine and buy chips and that’s all you eat well that is not very healthy. Your body is feeding off the carbs and sugars you just ate instead of consuming the nutrients it needs from a healthy snack. The bad thing about Chips is that they are available everywhere. Schools banned some chips from being sold in vending machines in campus. Which were replaced by the same kind of chips but in a baked version which is meant to be a healthier kind. Let’s put Doritos for example, looking at only the calories and sodium per serving between the original and the baked version. The original version has 140 calories and 210 mg of sodium, the baked version has 120 calories that is 20 calories less than the original, and 230 mg of sodium. That is 20 mg more sodium than the original one. It might be fewer calories, but it is more sodium. So if the baked version is supposed to be a healthier version why can’t we see a dramatic change? There is a difference between both of them, but the change is minimal. That was the schools solution to encourage students to eat healthier, but in most schools they have a “student store”. In the student store they typically sell snacks, and candy and drinks. In that store they sell the original chips they do not sell in the vending machines. So why go through all that trouble of not selling those types of chips when you could go to the student store
Have you noticed that the number of obese children you see has been growing in the last few decades? It is heart breaking to see obese children because as academic researchers you know that they are at risk for many health problems and are more likely to stay obese throughout adulthood. Childhood obesity is a severe problem that has become more prevalent in the last 30 years in the United States. Obesity in children has more than doubled since 1985(Childhood Obesity Facts). The causes of obesity growing, need to be known in order to stop it.
A big issue with vending machines in schools is the high calorie snacks and drinks cause obesity. Hopefully
Teachers are role models and they make big impressions on their students. When schools make up their policies they need to consider the student’s health. If schools have vending machines filled with potato chips, candy, and soda assessable to students it most likely will lead to students with poorer health, and it is their responsibility to not have these foods assessable to the students.
In the article, High School Vending Machines May Contribute to Teen Obesity School it is discussed how lunch menus follow federal regulations that limit unhealthy foods, but school vending machines have not been consistently regulated, and often offer unlimited access to sugar-sweetened beverages. Most schools have limited the amount of soda they offer, but many adults may not realize that sport drinks, fruit drinks, nondiet iced teas, lemonade, and even chocolate milk are all sugar sweetened. With this resource I will have a clearified understanding of vending machines in high schools.
I believe that it is time to consider putting healthier options into Mountain View vending machines. My child has expressed wanting to have better options to choose from, rather than having to opt for chips or pop tarts. I do not want to see the removal of everything that is bad or that has too much sugar because I do believe that is taking away the students’ rights to make that choice. In a study by Maia Paterson parents had this to say ” Parents saw high school as a time during which it is appropriate for children to have more freedom in decision-making and more responsibility for taking care of themselves.” In the same study it says “Parents viewed the issue of soft drink vending machines as a matter of their children’s personal choice more
Vending machines at school, or anywhere actually, consist of chips, cookies, candy and well that's not the best thing to have at a school when you are trying to keep children happy and healthy. The idea of actually restocking the vending with healthy choices will not only help motivating kids to make good healthy choices but will satisfy them in the long run. Having bad snacks at school but having healthy meals for lunch isn’t really the best mix for students who are trying to become healthier. If student are going to get a good nutritious lunch, then they should have healthy snack to choose from in the vending machine. Having schools change their food products to help obesity in America die down is amazing because it shows how much schools actually care for their students and their well beings, and that says a lot. Making a food change might even help with students paying more attention to lectures and their
There was a time when chubby children were considered cute. It was assumed that their baby fat would melt away and a healthy adult would emerge. We now know that childhood obesity can be very harmful for our nations children. Not only can obesity cause health problems but also psychological problems. In observing the causes of childhood obesity, hopefully we can slow down the epidemic.
One can rarely pick up a newspaper or magazine without reading about the obesity epidemic. With this rapid rise of obesity throughout our country, many people are growing increasingly concerned about the types of food that we are consuming. Specifically, the availability of vending machines has been under great scrutiny for the past several years. Many believe that the rise in obesity, is in part, linked to the easy access to junk foods prevalent in most vending machines. If vending machines had other healthier options then people would not have to make such poor nutritional choices. New methods have already been put in place to help create healthier food environments in schools, but so far other institutions like pediatric hospitals have yet to be reformed. Most people would assume that a hospital would offer the best nutritional services for their patients. Sadly, this is not the case. Most pediatric hospitals provide poor nutritional environments, especially when it comes to vending machines.