A study conducted by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health found lots of calories, saturated fat, sodium, and sugar in menu offerings for children, despite restaurant owners' pledges to improve the nutritional quality of kids' menus.
Despite the Kids LiveWell iniÂtiaÂtive launched by the American National Restaurant Association to improve chilÂdren’s menu offerÂings in restauÂrants, a study conÂducted by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health found no sigÂnifÂiÂcant health improveÂments and high levÂels of sugar in bevÂerÂage options. The study, pubÂlished in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, highÂlighted the need for more accountÂabilÂity and colÂlabÂoÂraÂtion between restauÂrants, nutriÂtion sciÂenÂtists, and pubÂlic health experts to proÂvide healthÂier options for chilÂdren.
About five years ago, the American National Restaurant Association teamed up with Healthy Dining to creÂate the Kids LiveWell proÂgram. To impleÂment the objecÂtives of the Kids LiveWell iniÂtiaÂtive, 42,000 restauÂrant locaÂtions nationÂwide comÂmitÂted to proÂvidÂing famÂiÂlies with a growÂing selecÂtion of healthÂful children’s menu choices when dinÂing out, with the menus requirÂing that at least one meal and one other item on the menu fall under proper nutriÂtional guideÂlines.
A study conÂducted by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, howÂever, found no subÂstanÂtial health improveÂments in the menu offerÂings. What is more, the amount of sugar in bevÂerÂage options for chilÂdren appeared to be alarmÂingly high.
The new study was pubÂlished in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine and was the first of its kind to examÂine trends in the nutriÂtional conÂtent of children’s meals among US restauÂrant chains, at a time when many were tranÂsiÂtionÂing towards healthÂier menu choices.
The researchers employed data acquired from the nutriÂtion cenÂsus MenuStat, and looked into trends in the nutriÂent conÂtent of 4,016 bevÂerÂages, main courses, side dishes, and desserts offered on children’s menus in 45 of the nation’s top 100 fast food, fast casual, and full-serÂvice restauÂrant chains between 2012 and 2015. Out of the total numÂber of restauÂrant chains, fifÂteen were Kids LiveWell parÂtakÂers.
It was found that neiÂther group showed subÂstanÂtial improveÂment in the numÂber of caloÂries, satÂuÂrated fat, or sodium in menu offerÂings for chilÂdren over the first three years after the launch of the Kids LiveWell project in 2011. Children’s desserts had almost as many caloÂries and roughly twice the amount of satÂuÂrated fat as the main course, while the averÂage children’s entree far exceeded recÂomÂmenÂdaÂtions for sodium and satÂuÂrated fat.
In addiÂtion, eighty perÂcent of children’s bevÂerÂage options were sugÂary drinks, and this even though indiÂvidÂual restauÂrants had vowed to gradÂuÂally cut them out. The study also showed that whenÂever restauÂrant ownÂers excluded soda from the menus, they tended to replace it with flaÂvored milk and sweetÂened teas.
“This study highÂlights the imporÂtance of monÂiÂtorÂing restauÂrant comÂmitÂments over time, both to hold the indusÂtry accountÂable to their pledges, and to assess whether furÂther improveÂments are made down the road,” said to Olive Oil Times lead author Alyssa Moran, a docÂtoral stuÂdent in the Department of Nutrition at Harvard Chan School.
Asked why no actual progress has been made regardÂing the qualÂity of kids’ menus, Moran answered that this is mainly an accountÂabilÂity issue. To parÂticÂiÂpate in Kids LiveWell, restauÂrants are only required to offer one meal and one other item that meet cerÂtain nutriÂtional requireÂments. Although this is a step in the right direcÂtion, restauÂrants can get credit for parÂticÂiÂpatÂing by makÂing only very minÂiÂmal changes.
“Modifying the proÂgram to require that all kids’ menu items meet nutriÂtional stanÂdards, and offerÂing guideÂlines for healthy bevÂerÂages would likely have a bigÂger impact. With that said, many of the restauÂrants chains in our study have thouÂsands of locaÂtions nationÂwide and may just be slow to adopt volÂunÂtary pledges, rather than resisÂtant to change. Kids deserve foods that taste good and proÂvide the nutriÂents they need to grow and develop into healthy adults, and restauÂrants are in a great posiÂtion to make those types of foods availÂable,” conÂtinÂued Moran.
The sciÂenÂtist also stressed that there needs to be more colÂlabÂoÂraÂtion between chefs, foodÂserÂvice execÂuÂtives, and nutriÂtion sciÂenÂtists to come up with innoÂvÂaÂtive, finanÂcially viable soluÂtions, citÂing a proÂgram called Menus of Change, which was creÂated by The Culinary Institute of America and Harvard School of Public Health, and which seeks to do just that.
“Local govÂernÂments can also play a role in conÂnectÂing restauÂrants with pubÂlic health experts. In Philadelphia, the Department of Public Health worked with Chinese take-out restauÂrant ownÂers to reduce salt in their foods by proÂvidÂing trainÂing from proÂfesÂsional chefs and by workÂing with disÂtribÂuÂtors to offer lower sodium ingreÂdiÂents,” the lead author of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health study reported.
“These types of proÂgrams can work, espeÂcially if restauÂrants feel there is a demand for healthÂier options from their cusÂtomers. So, there’s also a role for parÂents to play, in telling restauÂrants they want healthÂier options for their kids!”
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