• Hey, guys! FreeOnes Tube is up and running - see for yourself!
  • FreeOnes Now Listing Male and Trans Performers! More info here!

Junk Food Laws May Help Curb Childhood Obesity: Study

Mayhem

Banned
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/13/study-junk-food-laws-may-_n_1771352.html

Laws strictly curbing school sales of junk food and sweetened drinks may play a role in slowing childhood obesity, according to a study that seems to offer the first evidence such efforts could pay off.

The results come from the first large national look at the effectiveness of the state laws over time. They are not a slam-dunk, and even obesity experts who praised the study acknowledge the measures are a political hot potato, smacking of a "nanny state" and opposed by industry and cash-strapped schools relying on food processors' money.

But if the laws have even a tiny effect, "what are the downsides of improving the food environment for children today?" asked Dr. David Ludwig, an obesity specialist at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital. "You can't get much worse than it already is."

Children in the study gained less weight from fifth through eighth grades if they lived in states with strong, consistent laws versus no laws governing snacks available in schools. For example, kids who were 5 feet tall and 100 pounds gained on average 2.2 fewer pounds if they lived in states with strong laws in the three years studied.

Also, children who were overweight or obese in fifth grade were more likely to reach a healthy weight by eighth grade if they lived in states with the strongest laws.

The effects weren't huge, and the study isn't proof that the laws influenced kids' weight. But the results raised optimism among obesity researchers and public health experts who generally applaud strong laws to get junk food out of schools.

"This is the first real evidence that the laws are likely to have an impact," said Dr. Virginia Stallings, director of the nutrition center at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Stallings chaired an Institute of Medicine panel that urged standards for making snack foods and drinks sold in schools more healthful but was not involved in the new research.

The authors of the study, released online Monday in the journal Pediatrics, analyzed data on 6,300 students in 40 states. Their heights and weights were measured in spring 2004, when they were finishing fifth grade and soon to enter middle school, and in 2007, during the spring of eighth grade.

The researchers also examined several databases of state laws on school nutrition during the same time. The states were not identified in the study because of database license restrictions that protect the students' confidentiality, the authors said.

The laws governed food and drinks sold in public school vending machines and school stores, outside of mealtime. Laws were considered strong if they included specific nutrition requirements, such as limits on sugar and fats. Laws were rated weak if the requirements were vague and merely urged sales of "healthy" food without specifics.

The results show that for these laws to be effective, they need to be consistently strong in all grades, said lead author Daniel Taber, a health policy researcher at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

In late 2003, 27 of the states studied had no relevant laws affecting middle-schoolers, seven had weak laws and six had strong laws. Several states and school districts enacted tougher laws affecting middle-schoolers and younger kids during the next few years as national concern rose over obesity rates.

Recent data suggest that almost 20 percent of elementary school children nationwide are obese, and the rate among teens is only slightly lower.

In states with consistently strong laws in elementary and middle school, almost 39 percent of fifth-graders were overweight when the study began. That fell to 34 percent in eighth grade. Also, almost 21 percent of fifth-graders were obese, declining to about 18 percent in the eighth grade.

In states with no relevant laws, almost 37 percent of fifth-graders were overweight and 21 percent were obese, and those numbers barely budged by eighth grade.

Boston University statistician Mark Glickman said the study design makes it difficult to reach any convincing conclusions. It's possible, for example, that stronger laws might be more prevalent in Democratic-leaning states with better-educated residents, and less obesity. But the study authors said they found stronger laws in states that had high levels of obesity.

The authors accounted for gender, race, income and school location.

Taber noted that several Southern states have been the most aggressive at targeting school junk food, "probably because they have the highest rates of obesity."

Ludwig, the Boston obesity specialist, praised the researchers for trying to "tackle a complicated question."

"The challenge is that there are a great many factors that coalesce to influence body weight," Ludwig said. "Disentangling these influences and looking at the independent effects of just one is a methodological nightmare."
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
A hundred years ago I went to school there were no vending machines. Food was either prepared by mom or bought in the cafeterias. School lunches were cheap and not nutritious. If the government wants to show their profile of healthy foods then the schools are the best way to start. If mom is too lazy to pack Johnie's lunch and hand him a few bucks then Johnny doesn't get bologna and Twinkies.
 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
Just more inaccurate and purposefully misleading studies to make taking freedoms away look good.
 
choices to live a cleaner lifestyle must come from within the individual, no amount of edicts can force a person to change themselves for the better in the long run
 
Know what else helps curb childhood obesity? Good fucking parenting. Why do we have to make laws about this kind of thing? Step up to the fucking plate, parents. Quit being the douchenozzles that allow their kids to do anything, eat anything they want. Train them to eat well, make good decisions, and they won't be fat little fucks.

Jebus on a broom playing quidditch with Lucifer. Let's get back to a time when parents were held responsible for their children, shall we?
 
Know what else helps curb childhood obesity? Good fucking parenting. Why do we have to make laws about this kind of thing? Step up to the fucking plate, parents. Quit being the douchenozzles that allow their kids to do anything, eat anything they want. Train them to eat well, make good decisions, and they won't be fat little fucks.

Jebus on a broom playing quidditch with Lucifer. Let's get back to a time when parents were held responsible for their children, shall we?
Troof
 

Kingfisher

Here Zombie, Zombie, Zombie...
It's not so much the food, as it is the accessibility, very low cost/ low cost of the garbage food and people ability to deny themselves. Yes, one or two bon-bons are tasty, an entire carton in one sitting is not.
Vending machines, all fast food places, soda manufactures and parents not saying "No" to the child are to blame.
Fast food - fast to your grave.

Just the other day, my kid and I went into the AM-PM gas station store. We walked from our house to there to kid a small icee. So it's a treat. Not a everyday thing.
It was a hot day, and he'd been a good kid. We got exercise on the way there and back.
While in the store a small boy, half my kids age, threw a fit because he couldn't get a dvd from the redbox.
In order for the mom to shut him up, she gave the kid a large icee. Okay, so not only did she reward the kid for his bad behavior, she gave him a shit load of cheap sugar.
Parent fail.
 
So now the US governments is gonna make laws to protect the american people from their own dumbness ?
Come on, every one knows that well balanced meals (some meat, vegetables, fruits, milk/cheese/yoghurt, dessert), 3 meal/day and no eating between then will keep you healthy.
People are getting fat because they are too lazy or too greedy.

Also, the problem is, sisinnce many people are obese, people think it's OK to be fat. But it's not. Being fat favors hearts attacks, liver diseases, varicosed veins, etc...
Obesity is a disease and it will make many other diseases much worst than they would have been on on healthy person.
 

StanScratch

My Penis Is Dancing!
Accessibility is a huge factor. As others have said, vending machines in schools is not a step in the right direction - is there a machine with V8 or Bolthouse Farms drinks next to the pop? How about vending machines with fewer chips and candy bars and more fresh fruit, nuts and granola?
Go to the grocery, and look at what "goods" have the key spots. Chips, pop and such on the endcaps and on the main race track. A display with cakes, cookies and other sweets at the opening slot of the grocery walk. Sugary cereals lead off that aisle, the good 80 percent chocolates hidden at the back of the candy aisle, nuts buried in the end of the chip aisle. Meanwhile, other healthy goods are limited to their own aisle, or on the top shelves.
But, it is by design. Fat dumb people are going to keep on spending a lot of money on fatty foods.
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
Just more inaccurate and purposefully misleading studies to make taking freedoms away look good.

What are you talking about? Do you think that healthy foods served to kids is bad? You'll have your freedom. Pack whatever you want into the kid's lunch box. Just make sure he eats. The freedom of having vending machines in school? Why not franchise Mc Donald's in there? Give kids the freedom of choice? Maybe the kid will like a fruit or vegetable at school that they will ask for at home. Is that such a bad thing?

And now we wait for the smiley faced response from Will.
 
Maybe the kid will like a fruit or vegetable at school that they will ask for at home.
Problem is, if you have both in the vendind machine Mars and apples, even if apples are cheeaper, 90% kids will take Mars...
 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
What are you talking about? Do you think that healthy foods served to kids is bad? You'll have your freedom. Pack whatever you want into the kid's lunch box. Just make sure he eats. The freedom of having vending machines in school? Why not franchise Mc Donald's in there? Give kids the freedom of choice? Maybe the kid will like a fruit or vegetable at school that they will ask for at home. Is that such a bad thing?

And now we wait for the smiley faced response from Will.

They should have a choice. Also, they should not have their lunches taken from them just because a Fascist witch thinks she knows better than their parents.

Schools are not there to do anything but teach a few things. They are not parents.
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
Problem is, if you have both in the vendind machine Mars and apples, even if apples are cheeaper, 90% kids will take Mars...

Solution. Take the vending machines out. If the kid complains then make sure their belly is full before they get on the bus. They can go 3 hours before their next meal.

And Will, the choice is there. No one is taking any lunches away. If mom doesn't like the school lunch program then pack one for them. If you are saying that the kids should have their choice then fuck them. I grew up in a house that said if you didn't want what was put on the plate then go buy your own food. This ain't a fucking restaurant. And make sure you finish everything on that plate. We don't throw food out.
 

Facetious

Moderated
Re: Junk Food Laws May Help Curb Childhood Obesity: Study


Adult Image Hosting


:1orglaugh


Oh.... and a bunch of biased studies with predeterminded outcomes (to raise the children).

Hogwash! We need responsible parents to raise their children... unfortunately the responsible parents are the exception in this f---ed up world these days it would seem. :helpme:
 

Mayhem

Banned
Problem is, if you have both in the vendind machine Mars and apples, even if apples are cheeaper, 90% kids will take Mars...

I reject that premise. Kids are smarter than adults give them credit for and they don't hate healthy eating as much as adults blame them for. I think alot of what Will says is in complete contradiction to reality. Kids eat junk because, a lot of times, it's all that's available. Set up your apples and pears, fruit juices, bottled water (in other words, give them freedom of choice....Will), and you might be surprised by the choices they make.

And as far as the posts saying that good parenting is the key, I'll quote Capt. Malcom Reynolds: "Yeah, and I'd like to be the King of all Londinium and wear a shiny hat" Show me a fat kid, I'll show you a fat parent. I grew up in a town that was a complete nightmare of bad parenting (out of control kids, bullying, blatant thuggery). Screw the fantasy. Parents need to be regulated just like banks do. Heavily and comprehensively.
 

Facetious

Moderated
I grew up in a house that said if you didn't want what was put on the plate then go buy your own food. This ain't a fucking restaurant. And make sure you finish everything on that plate. We don't throw food out.


Yup yup, me too....I can't tell you how many times I was ordered by my grandmum to eat the tuna casserole she had prepared for our dinner or stay seated at the dinner table until mum and dad get home (usually 3 - 4 hours in the penalty box as dinner was served at about 6pm and mum and dad would return about 10:00 pm). Me: ''But gramma, you know I hate tuna casserole...'' She: " Listen to me sonny, I grew up during the depression, we used to have to eat... yaddayadda yadda for dinner... and that's if we were lucky.... and so on and so forth. ..."

:1orglaugh
 

Facetious

Moderated
And as far as the posts saying that good parenting is the key, I'll quote Capt. Malcom Reynolds: "Yeah, and I'd like to be the King of all Londinium and wear a shiny hat" Show me a fat kid, I'll show you a fat parent. I grew up in a town that was a complete nightmare of bad parenting (out of control kids, bullying, blatant thuggery). Screw the fantasy.

I didn't get into specifics, but certainly fat parenting is also bad parenting. ;)

Parents need to be regulated just like banks do. Heavily and comprehensively.

If they're receiving a government subsidy said obese parents (all w-f recips for that matter) should be limited to what they can purchase with food stamps. Only milk, whole grain stuff, fruit & veggies etc.:yesyes:
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
I didn't get into specifics, but certainly fat parenting is also bad parenting. ;)



If they're receiving a government subsidy said obese parents (all w-f recips for that matter) should be limited to what they can purchase with food stamps. Only milk, whole grain stuff, fruit & veggies etc.:yesyes:

That's a great idea but let's not stop there. Let's set up local pantries that distribute this food to the people that are looking for a little help. You can also give them the clothes that the government thinks they should be wearing and the toilet paper they should be wiping their asses with.
 
Top