“Fast food may
add 6 pounds a year to kids.”
Study: A third of children eat such meals every day
by Associated Press
Every day, nearly
one-third of U.S. children aged 4 to 19 eat fast food, which likely packs on
about 6 extra pounds per child a year and increases the risk of obesity, a
study of 6,212 youngsters found.
The numbers,
though alarming, are not surprising since billions of dollars are spent each
year on fast-food advertising directed at kids, said lead author Dr. David
Ludwig, director of the obesity program at Children’s Hospital Boston.
The findings
suggest that fast-food consumption has increase fivefold among children since
1970, Ludwig said.
The study appears
in the January issue of Pediatrics, published Monday.
The nationally
representative study included boys and girls from all regions of the country
and different socio-economic levels.
The highest levels
of fast-food consumption were found in youngsters with higher household income
levels, boys, older children, blacks and children living in the South.
The lowest levels
were found in youngsters living in the West, rural areas, Hispanics and those
aged 4 to 8, but more than 20 percent of youngsters in each of those groups
still reported eating fast food on any given day.
Fast-food lovers
consumed more fats, sugars, and carbohydrates and fewer fruits and non-starchy
vegetables than youngsters who didn’t eat fast food. They also consumed 187
more daily calories, which likely adds up to about 6 pounds more per year, the
study found.
The results are
based on children questioned in government surveys from 1994 to 1996 and 1998.
The study lacks
data on the children’s weight.
Children’s levels
of fast-food consumption probably are even higher because of an increase in the
number of fast-food restaurants and in fast-food marketing since the late
1990s, Ludwig said.
The nation’s
obesity epidemic has focused attention on fast-food restaurants. Many chains
have begun offering healthier fare.
Recent data
suggest that nearly 15 percent of U.S. youngster and almost one-third of adults
are obese.
The new study
results bolster evidence that fast food contributes to increased calorie intake
and obesity risk in children, Yale University obesity researcher Kelly Brownell
said in an accompanying editorial.
Brownell said the
study refutes a July report from the U.S. National Chamber of Commerce, which
includes fast-food companies, that suggested fast-food restaurants “are not a
chief culprit in the fattening of America.”
Brownell said
there are encouraging signs that policymakers are taking action to protect
children from the fast-food trend, including efforts to limit soft drink and
snack food sales in schools, and to curb food advertising aimed at children.
Chicago Tribune, January 2004