Doctors Issue Nutrition
Report Card: Schools Earn Top Grades by Promoting Healthy Vegetarian Fare, Banning Vending Machines, and Focusing on Local
Produce
WASHINGTON—Children
heading back to school this
fall will benefit from the
recent push at all levels of
government to fight childhood
obesity by promoting healthy
eating, with a focus on increasing
consumption of fruits, vegetables,
and whole grains, according
to a new School Lunch Report
Card. For the report, nutrition
experts with the Physicians
Committee for Responsible Medicine
(PCRM) analyzed lunch menus
at elementary schools in 18
major school districts participating
in the National School Lunch
Program. PCRM also evaluated
the availability of nondairy
beverages and schools’
efforts to promote healthful foods to children.
Results show that school lunches
are increasingly healthful
in many districts. Fairfax,
Virginia, came out on top with
an A. The nation’s largest
school district, New York City,
is another star pupil with
its focus on local produce
and whole grains and a ban
on whole milk. But a few districts
continue to lag behind: Memphis
City School District received
an F.
“Childhood obesity is
a bigger threat to kids than
the schoolyard bully, so lunchrooms
must provide healthful, low-fat
vegetarian fare,” says
PCRM nutritionist Dulcie Ward,
R.D. “The biggest change
our report found this year
is in much greater availability
of vegetarian and vegan options.” The
school lunch report card is
shown below.