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Media Coverage

''School lunches healthier, Administrators work to balance nutrition with appeal to students''


"The vending machine in the locker room is prime competition. So is the food served a la carte in the cafeteria. They are trying to win over students’ appetites and their dollars.

The dollars go back into schools as revenue, but empty calories go onto children’s waistlines and may be contributing to an increase in obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Meanwhile, the USDA requires schools to offer increasingly healthier options through the national school lunch program.

A study released late last month delivers the message: Make competitive foods offered in schools healthier, too.

The study was a collaboration between the Pew Charitable Trusts and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and came from two projects, the Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project – the director, Jessica Donze Black, is a University of Delaware graduate – and the Health Impact Project."

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