Thursday, May 2, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

How to make kids eat healthy food in school

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Nov, 2014 10:58 AM
  • How to make kids eat healthy food in school
Along with the menu, improving the environment of the school cafeteria is important to ensure intake of healthy food by children, says a new research.
 
The researchers found that more children ate their vegetables and whole grains when it was quieter in the cafeteria, though noise had little effect on consumption of food belonging to other food groups.
 
"As much as we are focused on menus in the school lunch programme, we need to look more at our cafeteria environments, especially with our youngest children," said Susan Gross, a research associate at the Johns Hopkins University in the US.
 
"We can give kids the healthiest food possible, but if they do not have time to eat it or they are distracted by how noisy the cafeteria is, they are not going to eat it," Gross added.
 
The researchers observed 274 children in kindergarten through second grade in 10 New York City public schools.
 
They found that only 58 percent chose a fruit and 59 percent chose a vegetable.
 
The researchers also found that children were much more likely to finish their food if a teacher ate in the cafeteria with them.
 
Besides, the children were more likely to eat when their food was cut up into smaller pieces and when lunch periods were longer.
 
The study is scheduled to be presented at American Public Health Association's annual meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana, Nov 17.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Home cooked food, the ideal recipe for healthy diet

Home cooked food, the ideal recipe for healthy diet
Those who frequently cooked at home -- six-to-seven nights a week -- also consumed fewer calories on the occasions when they ate out, the findings showed....

Home cooked food, the ideal recipe for healthy diet

Emotional stress affects young women's heart more

Emotional stress affects young women's heart more
Young women with heart diseases are more likely than men to have reduced blood flow to their heart if they are under emotional stress, says a new research....

Emotional stress affects young women's heart more

Travelling with a smoker increases cancer risk

Travelling with a smoker increases cancer risk
While simply sitting in cars with people who smoke, non-smokers breathe in a host of potentially dangerous compounds that are associated with cancer, heart disease...

Travelling with a smoker increases cancer risk

Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay

Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay
Regular, moderate consumption of filtered, decaffeinated coffee may decrease an individual's risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, promising research indicates....

Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay

Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime

Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime
A Croatian biologist has developed an app for smartphones that is able to follow up on the user's physical fitness by taking "selfie" photos on a daily basis....

Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime

'Smart' drugs make bright people stupid

'Smart' drugs make bright people stupid
They may improve the creativity of only those who are not naturally gifted, the findings suggested. The study focused on the smart drug Modafinil....

'Smart' drugs make bright people stupid

PrevNext