Nutrition Value Of Fast Food

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“Would You Like Fries with That?”: Parents Provide Children with Fast Food that can Lead to Health Concerns.
Is it acceptable to allow children to consume drugs and play with knives? What about providing a child a harmful substance for consumption? In today’s society a fast food restaurant can be found in any city within a ten minute drive. The food is quick, accessible, and tastes delicious thanks to plenty of sugars, salt, and fat. Most adults would agree that while fast food restaurants may be convenient during a busy schedule, they are not the healthiest options. Adults know or at least have some idea what the nutrition value of a fast meal is, but children, especially ages two through ten, have not learned that everything that tastes …show more content…

These options are smaller, come with a side and a drink, and usually a toy. What is not advertised is the nutrition value. Nutrition standards are the amount of vitamins, sodium, fat, sugar, cholesterol, carbohydrates, and calories in a food item. Ideally children should have a balanced diet including protein, grains, dairy, fruits, and vegetables. However according to Dr. Ameena Batada who has her doctorate in public health communication, Dr. Meg Brueing with a Ph.D. in nutritional sciences, Dr. Elizabeth Marchlewicz who is a doctoral candidate at the University of Michigan, Dr. Mary Story who is the Associated Director for Academic Programs at Duke University, and finally, Dr. Margo Wootan (2012) who has her doctorate in nutrition conducted a research study to find out how many fast food restaurants provided kid’s choices that met healthy eating standards. In this study 50 of the most popular fast food restaurants in America were consulted and it was found that only 15 of the 1662 choices and combinations passed recommended nutrition standards (p. 253). This is an unacceptably low amount. This means that a parent driving down a highly fast food populated area has a .009 percent chance of buying a healthy meal for their kid. It might as well be impossible to get a healthy kid’s meal, but what harm does it do? If a child continually misses the standards for nutrition it can set …show more content…

If a person had not seen the broadcasted news reports or court cases having read that only 15 out of 1662 kid’s meals is healthy is convincing, claiming that as a parent there was not enough information available of nutrition to know the food is unhealthy is the laziest excuse that could be used. As culinary author Andrew F. Smith (2006) wrote, “Beginning in the 1970s, criticism of fast food spread throughout the country [United States]. The concerns focused on the overload of fat, cholesterol, and calories coupled with the lack of vitamins, minerals, and fiber” (section health concerns, p. 129). A fast food epidemic has now been concerning the United States for over 45 years. Any person claiming not to have heard about the lack of nutrition in fast food does not live in a place close to a fast food joint. According to Batada et al. (2012) it is inexcusable to not know the nutrition facts for a meal because “A[a] national law requiring calories to be posted on menus and menu boards at chain restaurants with 20 or more outlets passed in March, 2010.” (p. 251). The majority popular restaurants are going to be required to display nutrition facts, which make it easy for parents to look up at the menu and see that the kid’s meal choices reaching around 800 calories are a bad choice. Even if parents do not know the specific nutrition facts for fast food it has become a popular topic across America. Morgan Spurlock (2004) is better

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