Our national school lunch program provides daily meals to over 29 million students, 20 million of which are provided free of cost. Since kids are in school 180 days a year on average, that adds up to a lot of school lunches. This program was a huge safety net during the COVID pandemic, as schools relied on grab-and-go distribution that allowed adults to pick up the meals without the children present and without requiring payment.
Before and after the pandemic, the US school lunch program has done the job of getting calories into kids’ bellies. And as a dietitian and a mother concerned about hunger and malnutrition, I don’t scoff at that.
But as a dietitian and mother, I also believe that food can be medicine or poison and that the quality of food being served in schools across the country is harming our kids’ metabolic health. We can see this in continued increases in childhood obesity, type 2 diabetes, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
We can’t fix problems we don’t understand clearly. In this edition of Pro Perspective, I’m going to outline what’s wrong with school lunches today, and what we can do about it.
Let’s use this picture (taken by our Director of Marketing and professional food photographer, Anne Watson) of a week’s worth of her son’s school lunches.
1. Way too much sugar
Healthy food advocates have been successful in banning sodas from school lunches, but high-sugar culprits like chocolate milk and fruit juice remain. Juice especially can have almost as much sugar as an equivalent amount of soda.
Another item that stands out in the pictures above include the dried cranberries, which the USDA considers a day’s serving of fruit, but they have 21 grams of added sugar (not naturally occurring fruit sugar).
Compare this to the kiwi, which has a net 8 grams of carbohydrates, zero added sugar, and provides 85% of the entire day’s intake of Vitamin C. And Scooby Snacks? At 21 grams of refined carbohydrates and 8 grams of added sugar, they’re not even healthy for a dog.
2. Too low in protein
Less than 15% of the calories in a typical school lunch come from protein. The rest of the calories mostly come from refined carbohydrates and fat. Ideally, we want our meals to be at least 20% protein.
As we describe in this One Big Idea article on the protein leverage hypothesis, nearly everyone is getting way too little protein and way too much refined carbohydrates and fat. It’s this out-of-whack ratio that is the main cause of metabolic disease.
3. Low-quality protein
A 2009 investigation by USA Today found that what was served in the School Lunch Program didn’t meet quality or safety standards for Fast Food Restaurants! This has improved, but shelf-stable mini cheeseburgers? We can do better.
4. Too little fresh food
The need for grab-and-go, especially during the pandemic is understandable and is clearly a huge logistical challenge. But fresh, whole real food provides special health-promoting micro-nutrients that packaged and processed food cannot.
Nutrients like polyphenols and other antioxidants support our immune system and help us thrive. We have to do better than the 6 fresh foods out of the 19 items that are shown in the top picture for a week’s worth of food.
5. Misleading nutrition labels
Labeling like the Whole Grain Council on the Scooby Snacks is for marketing purposes and carries little informational value. True whole grains are foods like brown rice, popcorn, or bulgar and contain at least 1/10th of their carbohydrates as fiber. It’s the fiber that makes whole grains healthy, partially by slowing down the rise in blood sugar from the carbohydrate.
Guess how much fiber is in these Scooby Snacks? 1 gram. That’s 1/21th of the snack’s carb content as fiber. Yes, these snacks contain “whole wheat flour” but it’s highly processed, and it will raise blood sugar just as fast as regular white flour.
For many, the choice is between eating food that doesn’t serve their health goals or not eating at all. And what can school systems do with limited funds and expanding needs? What can state and federal policymakers do when they have competing funding priorities and powerful corporate lobbyists that want the system to stay the same?
I believe we can do better at all levels, but we can’t wait for change on a larger level to make a change at the local level. We can start small and work out from there.
Here are several strategies to boost our kids' lunches without breaking the bank:
Better nutrition for our children at all levels is something important to fight for. Together we can create change.
And don’t forget about our incredible recipe collection.
Apple Sandwiches
Collard Green Veggie Wrap
Cilantro Field Fresh Salad Shaker
Podcast /
Content /
Nourish
Lexi Hall, RDN takes a look at the lunches schools provide and shares healthy changes we can make as parents.
Our kids' school lunch programs aren't hitting the mark for truly nourishing, real whole foods.
Lexi Hall, RDN lists 5 problems with school lunches and offers solutions on how to advocate for healthy change in your community.
Lexi also includes ideas on how to make sure your child is getting the nourishment they need from home and future lunches.
Reading time:
6 minutes
Our national school lunch program provides daily meals to over 29 million students, 20 million of which are provided free of cost. Since kids are in school 180 days a year on average, that adds up to a lot of school lunches. This program was a huge safety net during the COVID pandemic, as schools relied on grab-and-go distribution that allowed adults to pick up the meals without the children present and without requiring payment.
Before and after the pandemic, the US school lunch program has done the job of getting calories into kids’ bellies. And as a dietitian and a mother concerned about hunger and malnutrition, I don’t scoff at that.
But as a dietitian and mother, I also believe that food can be medicine or poison and that the quality of food being served in schools across the country is harming our kids’ metabolic health. We can see this in continued increases in childhood obesity, type 2 diabetes, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
We can’t fix problems we don’t understand clearly. In this edition of Pro Perspective, I’m going to outline what’s wrong with school lunches today, and what we can do about it.
Let’s use this picture (taken by our Director of Marketing and professional food photographer, Anne Watson) of a week’s worth of her son’s school lunches.
1. Way too much sugar
Healthy food advocates have been successful in banning sodas from school lunches, but high-sugar culprits like chocolate milk and fruit juice remain. Juice especially can have almost as much sugar as an equivalent amount of soda.
Another item that stands out in the pictures above include the dried cranberries, which the USDA considers a day’s serving of fruit, but they have 21 grams of added sugar (not naturally occurring fruit sugar).
Compare this to the kiwi, which has a net 8 grams of carbohydrates, zero added sugar, and provides 85% of the entire day’s intake of Vitamin C. And Scooby Snacks? At 21 grams of refined carbohydrates and 8 grams of added sugar, they’re not even healthy for a dog.
2. Too low in protein
Less than 15% of the calories in a typical school lunch come from protein. The rest of the calories mostly come from refined carbohydrates and fat. Ideally, we want our meals to be at least 20% protein.
As we describe in this One Big Idea article on the protein leverage hypothesis, nearly everyone is getting way too little protein and way too much refined carbohydrates and fat. It’s this out-of-whack ratio that is the main cause of metabolic disease.
3. Low-quality protein
A 2009 investigation by USA Today found that what was served in the School Lunch Program didn’t meet quality or safety standards for Fast Food Restaurants! This has improved, but shelf-stable mini cheeseburgers? We can do better.
4. Too little fresh food
The need for grab-and-go, especially during the pandemic is understandable and is clearly a huge logistical challenge. But fresh, whole real food provides special health-promoting micro-nutrients that packaged and processed food cannot.
Nutrients like polyphenols and other antioxidants support our immune system and help us thrive. We have to do better than the 6 fresh foods out of the 19 items that are shown in the top picture for a week’s worth of food.
5. Misleading nutrition labels
Labeling like the Whole Grain Council on the Scooby Snacks is for marketing purposes and carries little informational value. True whole grains are foods like brown rice, popcorn, or bulgar and contain at least 1/10th of their carbohydrates as fiber. It’s the fiber that makes whole grains healthy, partially by slowing down the rise in blood sugar from the carbohydrate.
Guess how much fiber is in these Scooby Snacks? 1 gram. That’s 1/21th of the snack’s carb content as fiber. Yes, these snacks contain “whole wheat flour” but it’s highly processed, and it will raise blood sugar just as fast as regular white flour.
For many, the choice is between eating food that doesn’t serve their health goals or not eating at all. And what can school systems do with limited funds and expanding needs? What can state and federal policymakers do when they have competing funding priorities and powerful corporate lobbyists that want the system to stay the same?
I believe we can do better at all levels, but we can’t wait for change on a larger level to make a change at the local level. We can start small and work out from there.
Here are several strategies to boost our kids' lunches without breaking the bank:
Better nutrition for our children at all levels is something important to fight for. Together we can create change.
And don’t forget about our incredible recipe collection.
Apple Sandwiches
Collard Green Veggie Wrap
Cilantro Field Fresh Salad Shaker
Our national school lunch program provides daily meals to over 29 million students, 20 million of which are provided free of cost. Since kids are in school 180 days a year on average, that adds up to a lot of school lunches. This program was a huge safety net during the COVID pandemic, as schools relied on grab-and-go distribution that allowed adults to pick up the meals without the children present and without requiring payment.
Before and after the pandemic, the US school lunch program has done the job of getting calories into kids’ bellies. And as a dietitian and a mother concerned about hunger and malnutrition, I don’t scoff at that.
But as a dietitian and mother, I also believe that food can be medicine or poison and that the quality of food being served in schools across the country is harming our kids’ metabolic health. We can see this in continued increases in childhood obesity, type 2 diabetes, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
We can’t fix problems we don’t understand clearly. In this edition of Pro Perspective, I’m going to outline what’s wrong with school lunches today, and what we can do about it.
Let’s use this picture (taken by our Director of Marketing and professional food photographer, Anne Watson) of a week’s worth of her son’s school lunches.
1. Way too much sugar
Healthy food advocates have been successful in banning sodas from school lunches, but high-sugar culprits like chocolate milk and fruit juice remain. Juice especially can have almost as much sugar as an equivalent amount of soda.
Another item that stands out in the pictures above include the dried cranberries, which the USDA considers a day’s serving of fruit, but they have 21 grams of added sugar (not naturally occurring fruit sugar).
Compare this to the kiwi, which has a net 8 grams of carbohydrates, zero added sugar, and provides 85% of the entire day’s intake of Vitamin C. And Scooby Snacks? At 21 grams of refined carbohydrates and 8 grams of added sugar, they’re not even healthy for a dog.
2. Too low in protein
Less than 15% of the calories in a typical school lunch come from protein. The rest of the calories mostly come from refined carbohydrates and fat. Ideally, we want our meals to be at least 20% protein.
As we describe in this One Big Idea article on the protein leverage hypothesis, nearly everyone is getting way too little protein and way too much refined carbohydrates and fat. It’s this out-of-whack ratio that is the main cause of metabolic disease.
3. Low-quality protein
A 2009 investigation by USA Today found that what was served in the School Lunch Program didn’t meet quality or safety standards for Fast Food Restaurants! This has improved, but shelf-stable mini cheeseburgers? We can do better.
4. Too little fresh food
The need for grab-and-go, especially during the pandemic is understandable and is clearly a huge logistical challenge. But fresh, whole real food provides special health-promoting micro-nutrients that packaged and processed food cannot.
Nutrients like polyphenols and other antioxidants support our immune system and help us thrive. We have to do better than the 6 fresh foods out of the 19 items that are shown in the top picture for a week’s worth of food.
5. Misleading nutrition labels
Labeling like the Whole Grain Council on the Scooby Snacks is for marketing purposes and carries little informational value. True whole grains are foods like brown rice, popcorn, or bulgar and contain at least 1/10th of their carbohydrates as fiber. It’s the fiber that makes whole grains healthy, partially by slowing down the rise in blood sugar from the carbohydrate.
Guess how much fiber is in these Scooby Snacks? 1 gram. That’s 1/21th of the snack’s carb content as fiber. Yes, these snacks contain “whole wheat flour” but it’s highly processed, and it will raise blood sugar just as fast as regular white flour.
For many, the choice is between eating food that doesn’t serve their health goals or not eating at all. And what can school systems do with limited funds and expanding needs? What can state and federal policymakers do when they have competing funding priorities and powerful corporate lobbyists that want the system to stay the same?
I believe we can do better at all levels, but we can’t wait for change on a larger level to make a change at the local level. We can start small and work out from there.
Here are several strategies to boost our kids' lunches without breaking the bank:
Better nutrition for our children at all levels is something important to fight for. Together we can create change.
And don’t forget about our incredible recipe collection.
Apple Sandwiches
Collard Green Veggie Wrap
Cilantro Field Fresh Salad Shaker
Our national school lunch program provides daily meals to over 29 million students, 20 million of which are provided free of cost. Since kids are in school 180 days a year on average, that adds up to a lot of school lunches. This program was a huge safety net during the COVID pandemic, as schools relied on grab-and-go distribution that allowed adults to pick up the meals without the children present and without requiring payment.
Before and after the pandemic, the US school lunch program has done the job of getting calories into kids’ bellies. And as a dietitian and a mother concerned about hunger and malnutrition, I don’t scoff at that.
But as a dietitian and mother, I also believe that food can be medicine or poison and that the quality of food being served in schools across the country is harming our kids’ metabolic health. We can see this in continued increases in childhood obesity, type 2 diabetes, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
We can’t fix problems we don’t understand clearly. In this edition of Pro Perspective, I’m going to outline what’s wrong with school lunches today, and what we can do about it.
Let’s use this picture (taken by our Director of Marketing and professional food photographer, Anne Watson) of a week’s worth of her son’s school lunches.
1. Way too much sugar
Healthy food advocates have been successful in banning sodas from school lunches, but high-sugar culprits like chocolate milk and fruit juice remain. Juice especially can have almost as much sugar as an equivalent amount of soda.
Another item that stands out in the pictures above include the dried cranberries, which the USDA considers a day’s serving of fruit, but they have 21 grams of added sugar (not naturally occurring fruit sugar).
Compare this to the kiwi, which has a net 8 grams of carbohydrates, zero added sugar, and provides 85% of the entire day’s intake of Vitamin C. And Scooby Snacks? At 21 grams of refined carbohydrates and 8 grams of added sugar, they’re not even healthy for a dog.
2. Too low in protein
Less than 15% of the calories in a typical school lunch come from protein. The rest of the calories mostly come from refined carbohydrates and fat. Ideally, we want our meals to be at least 20% protein.
As we describe in this One Big Idea article on the protein leverage hypothesis, nearly everyone is getting way too little protein and way too much refined carbohydrates and fat. It’s this out-of-whack ratio that is the main cause of metabolic disease.
3. Low-quality protein
A 2009 investigation by USA Today found that what was served in the School Lunch Program didn’t meet quality or safety standards for Fast Food Restaurants! This has improved, but shelf-stable mini cheeseburgers? We can do better.
4. Too little fresh food
The need for grab-and-go, especially during the pandemic is understandable and is clearly a huge logistical challenge. But fresh, whole real food provides special health-promoting micro-nutrients that packaged and processed food cannot.
Nutrients like polyphenols and other antioxidants support our immune system and help us thrive. We have to do better than the 6 fresh foods out of the 19 items that are shown in the top picture for a week’s worth of food.
5. Misleading nutrition labels
Labeling like the Whole Grain Council on the Scooby Snacks is for marketing purposes and carries little informational value. True whole grains are foods like brown rice, popcorn, or bulgar and contain at least 1/10th of their carbohydrates as fiber. It’s the fiber that makes whole grains healthy, partially by slowing down the rise in blood sugar from the carbohydrate.
Guess how much fiber is in these Scooby Snacks? 1 gram. That’s 1/21th of the snack’s carb content as fiber. Yes, these snacks contain “whole wheat flour” but it’s highly processed, and it will raise blood sugar just as fast as regular white flour.
For many, the choice is between eating food that doesn’t serve their health goals or not eating at all. And what can school systems do with limited funds and expanding needs? What can state and federal policymakers do when they have competing funding priorities and powerful corporate lobbyists that want the system to stay the same?
I believe we can do better at all levels, but we can’t wait for change on a larger level to make a change at the local level. We can start small and work out from there.
Here are several strategies to boost our kids' lunches without breaking the bank:
Better nutrition for our children at all levels is something important to fight for. Together we can create change.
And don’t forget about our incredible recipe collection.
Apple Sandwiches
Collard Green Veggie Wrap
Cilantro Field Fresh Salad Shaker
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