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Study shows: Kids will eat healthy school lunch
source: Steve Karnowski Houston Chronicle Date: 11/26/07
Maybe getting schoolchildren to eat healthy foods isn't a hopeless struggle. Bucking
some common notions, a University of Minnesota study has found that
school lunch sales don't decline when healthier meals are served, and
that more nutritious lunches don't necessarily cost schools more to
produce.
"The conventional wisdom that you can't serve
healthier meals because kids won't eat them is false," said Benjamin
Senauer, one of three economists who wrote the study.
Previous studies have concluded that students prefer fatty foods and that healthier meals cost more to make, the authors noted.
The
study, which appears in the December issue of the Review of
Agricultural Economics, analyzed five years of data for 330 Minnesota
public school districts. It looked at compliance with federal standards
for calories, nutrients and fats.
When the researchers
crunched all the numbers they found that schools serving the healthiest
lunches did not see a falloff in demand.
While serving
better meals does entail higher labor costs, the study found, that's
offset by lower costs for more nutritious foods such as fruits and
vegetables compared with processed foods. However, many districts need
to upgrade their kitchens and train their staff to prepare these foods,
the researchers said.
The study's conclusions rang true for
Jean Ronnei, director of nutrition services for St. Paul Public
Schools, which serves more than 46,000 meals daily. The district was
held up by the authors as a model for others.
Ronnei said
the percentage of St. Paul kids eating school lunches has increased in
recent years at the same time the district has been offering more
fruits and vegetables.
"That doesn't mean we don't have a hot dog on our menu. We do. ... In our case it's a turkey low-fat hot dog," she said.
Margo
Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the nonprofit Center for
Science in the Public Interest in Washington, said she was pleased to
see evidence that schools can offer nutritious meals kids will eat
without higher costs.
"I think people underestimate the willingness of kids to eat healthier foods," she said.
The
study also pointed out that school districts are allowed to charge
their lunch programs for indirect costs such as electricity or
janitorial services for their cafeterias. The authors said that can be
abused by cash-strapped districts charging their lunch programs high
overhead; they recommended tighter limits on those charges.
Dr.
Sandra Hassink of Wilmington, Del., a member of the American Academy of
Pediatrics' Obesity Task Force, said that was an important finding. She
said money allocated for nutritional programs should be spent on
nutrition.
Alice Jo Rainville, a professor of nutrition and
dietetics at Eastern Michigan University, noted that school nutrition
programs have improved because of federal policy changes enacted in
2004, the last year included in the study.
Rainville said
results in other states might not match those in Minnesota, but Senauer
said he believes the situation is similar across the country
"Everything we've done here, there's good reason to believe it's happening nationally," he said.
On the Net:
National School Lunch Program: http://www.fns.usda.gov/cnd/lunch
School Nutrition Association: http://www.schoolnutrition.org/
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |