低收入儿童的健康公平问题:饮食灵活性需要医生授权。

Obesity, open access Pub Date : 2015-09-01 Epub Date: 2015-08-20 DOI:10.16966/2380-5528.105
Jodi D Stookey
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引用次数: 2

摘要

美国农业部的项目,如儿童和成人保健食品计划(CACFP)、学校早餐计划(SBP)和/或国家学校午餐计划(NSLP),使托儿中心和学校能够每天为数百万低收入儿童提供免费和低价的膳食。尽管美国农业部计划让每个孩子都有平等的机会获得健康的饮食,但该计划的规定可能会导致儿童肥胖的差异和健康的不平等。美国农业部的项目规定要求儿童看护中心和学校提供包括特定种类食品和饮料的特定数量的膳食。这些规则是为平均、健康体重的儿童设计的,以保持体重和生长。它们不是为体重不足的儿童增加体重,肥胖的儿童使体重正常,或糖尿病前期儿童避免发生糖尿病而设计的。这些规则只允许一种膳食模式和份量,而不是灵活的膳食模式和份量。参加CACFP, SBP和/或NSLP的孩子的父母无法控制补贴膳食的数量或组成。参加补贴膳食计划的超重、肥胖或糖尿病儿童的父母可以要求改变饮食、特殊膳食或住宿,以解决孩子的健康状况,但除非有执照医生签署“要求特殊膳食和/或住宿的医疗声明”,否则托儿机构和学校不需要遵守这一要求。虽然医生是唯一被授权改变低收入儿童每天的食物、饮料和份量的团体,但他们并没有这样做。在过去的三年里,尽管旧金山儿童护理中心为低收入儿童提供的超重和肥胖患病率为30%,但没有人提交医疗声明,要求特殊膳食或住宿来改变日常膳食,以预防肥胖、治疗肥胖或预防餐后高血糖。低收入儿童在饮食上的灵活性比高收入儿童总体上要低,因为他们依赖免费或减价膳食、联邦食品计划政策,以及缺乏对只有医生才有权改变托儿中心和学校补贴膳食组成的认识。与高收入儿童相比,低收入儿童没有平等的机会改变他们的日常饮食摄入量以平衡能量需求。
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A Health Equity Problem for Low Income Children: Diet Flexibility Requires Physician Authorization.

USDA programs, such as the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP), School Breakfast Program (SBP), and/or National School Lunch Program (NSLP), enable child care centers and schools to provide free and reduced price meals, daily, to millions of low income children. Despite intention to equalize opportunity for every child to have a healthy diet, USDA program rules may be contributing to child obesity disparities and health inequity. USDA program rules require child care centers and schools to provide meals that include a specified number of servings of particular types of foods and beverages. The rules are designed for the average, healthy weight child to maintain weight and growth. They are not designed for the underweight child to gain weight, obese child to normalize weight, or pre-diabetic child to avoid incident diabetes. The rules allow for only one meal pattern and volume, as opposed to a flexible spectrum of meal patterns and portion sizes. Parents of children who participate in the CACFP, SBP, and/or NSLP do not have control over the amount or composition of the subsidized meals. Parents of overweight, obese, or diabetic children who participate in the subsidized meal programs can request dietary change, special meals or accommodations to address their child's health status, but child care providers and schools are not required to comply with the request unless a licensed physician signs a "Medical statement to request special meals and/or accommodations". Although physicians are the only group authorized to change the foods, beverages, and portion sizes served daily to low income children, they are not doing so. Over the past three years, despite an overweight and obesity prevalence of 30% in San Francisco child care centers serving low income children, zero medical statements were filed to request special meals or accommodations to alter daily meals in order to prevent obesity, treat obesity, or prevent postprandial hyperglycemia. Low income children have systematically less dietary flexibility than higher income children, because of reliance on free or reduced-price meals, federal food program policy, and lack of awareness that only physicians have authority to alter the composition of subsidized meals in child care centers and schools. Compared with higher income children, low income children do not have equal opportunity to change their daily dietary intake to balance energy requirements.

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Validation of a White-light 3D Body Volume Scanner to Assess Body Composition. Reliability of a 3D Body Scanner for Anthropometric Measurements of Central Obesity. A Health Equity Problem for Low Income Children: Diet Flexibility Requires Physician Authorization. Psychological Health and Overweight and Obesity Among High Stressed Work Environments.
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