American kids eat plenty of fast food
More than one in three American kids will eat fast food today, a new government report says.
The same will be true tomorrow, and the next day, and the day after that.
On any given day, 34.3 percent of U.S. children and teens between the ages of 2 and 19 eats pizza, fried chicken, tacos or some other dish prepared in a fastfood restaurant, according to data collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
More specifically, 12.1 percent of these young diners will get more than 40 percent of their daily calories in the form of fast food.
An additional 10.7 percent will trace 25 percent to 40 percent of their daily calories to a fast-food joint, and 11.6 percent will get fewer than 25 percent of their calories from one of these dining establishments.
When you average it all out, the youth of America get 12.4 percent of their calories on a bun, out of a deep fryer or from another quintessentially fast-food source every single day.
It doesn’t matter if these diners are boys or girls. Whether toddlers or teenagers, the proportion of daily calories obtained from fast food was statistically equivalent for both genders, according to the report published Tuesday by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.
Nor did it matter whether diners were rich or poor. Kids from families who were close to the poverty line counted on fast food for 11.5 percent of their daily calories, on average. Kids at the other end of the economic spectrum averaged 13 percent of their daily calories from fast food. That gap wasn’t big enough to be considered statistically significant, the report said.
Even weight status had little bearing on the appetite for fast food. Children and teens who were underweight or had a normal weight averaged 12.2 percent of their daily calories in the form of fast food.