z1

Posted by : A 26‏/11‏/2014

U.S. first lady Michelle Obama (2nd L) (Reuters / Jonathan Ernst)

The government-backed health initiative from 2012 was aimed at cutting obesity in the US by reducing the amount of sodium, sugar and fats in foods served at schools. It required that more fruits, vegetables and whole grains be put on the menu in order to foster a healthier lifestyle.


The study, by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stated that since 1980, the prevalence of obesity among US children and adolescents has tripled, and today 19.6 percent of children aged six–11 and 18.1 percent of adolescents aged 12–19 years are categorized as obese.


The hearts of the organization were certainly in the right place in trying to provide healthier meals. Unfortunately, in some cases, the end product left a lot to be desired.



It is difficult to tell what the above item of food contained. Though the green specks do look quite worrying. What was equally worrying was this was a far from isolated incident, with Twitter becoming flooded with irate and hungry schoolkids.


Just a small disclaimer: you may not want to eat your lunch while looking at the photos tweeted below.






Writing a column in the Wall Street Journal in February 2013 about the importance of providing healthy food for children, Michelle Obama said, "I have never been more optimistic about our prospects for solving this problem. And I am confident that, with leadership from America's business community, we can give all our children the bright, healthy futures they so richly deserve." However, the first lady may have forgotten that although the food maybe healthy - it must also be edible.



Although she may have alienated millions of kids across the country, Obama did get some backing. The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington advocacy group that has lobbied for the healthier lunches, tried to give her some moral support, showing pictures of kids eating healthy salads under the same hashtag.


"Even if the lunches were super unhealthy, there would be kids who would complain," said CSPI's Margo Wootan, as cited by AP.


The school meals program is overseen by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), which stated the vast majority of the photos are made to look worse than they actually are.


"Students are always provided full servings of both fruits and vegetables as well as protein options, so clearly many of the photos posted do not fully reflect the full range of choices students are provided," said USDA spokesman Cullen Schwarz.






source RT - Daily news http://ift.tt/1rjzoeo

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Posts | Subscribe to Comments

z2

Popular Post

Blogger templates

- Copyright © Zoom -RiwiZoom- Powered by Blogger - Designed by RiwiZoom -