Back to School Means Back to Lunches

Glow in the dark yoghurt. Fruit strips that are mostly sugar. For parents facing the back-to-school lunch crunch, it’s hard to decide what to buy. And food manufacturers aren’t making it any easier, according to research funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).

“We place a lot of focus on junk food,” says Dr. Charlene Elliott of Carleton University in Ottawa, and its contribution to childhood obesity. “But,” she adds, “We know much less about how food outside the category of “junk” is targeted to children.” This “fun food” is conveyed through food packaging, colour, graphics or language -  and even the shapes and colours of the foods themselves.

“It’s ironic,” she says -  “We tell adults not to use food primarily as fun, as sport, as entertainment. Yet, that’s the very message we’re sending to children.”

Dr. Elliott went through a local supermarket and found 366 products that fell into the category of fun food, including glow-in-the-dark yoghurt tubes, cereal that turns the milk blue, and instant oatmeal that hatches dinosaur eggs when boiling water is added -  food that may have a huge “yuck” factor for adults, but is irresistible to children.

It would be much easier if you could just steer clear of all fun foods, no matter how much your children plead. But not all fun food is necessarily bad for you.

“The way marketers present products as kids’ products is interesting, because the products span the spectrum from completely healthy to decidedly unhealthy,” says Dr. Elliott.

Take fruit strips, a common feature of many packed lunches. Some are 100% fruit, while others are full of sugar -  and without carefully reading labels, it’s hard to know the difference.

“Lots of parents who are vigilant about not buying junk food will unthinkingly go down the aisle and grab sugar-laden fruit snacks,” says Elliott.

When it comes to finding healthy ingredients for school lunches, she says, it’s clear that parents can’t let down their guard.

Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

Provided by ArmMed Media
Revision date: July 7, 2011
Last revised: by Tatiana Kuznetsova, D.M.D.