People nervously waiting around in New York City
hospitals
for loved ones to come out of surgery can’t smoke. In a few months from
now, they can’t have a supersized fast-food soda. And soon, they won’t
even be able to get a candy bar out of the vending machine or a piece of
fried chicken from the cafeteria.
In one of his latest health campaigns, Mayor
Michael Bloomberg is aiming to banish sugary and fatty foods from both public and private hospitals.
In recent years, the city’s 15 public hospitals have cut calories in
patients’ meals and restricted the sale of sugary drinks and unhealthy
snacks at vending machines. But now the city is tackling hospital
cafeteria food, too. And the Healthy Hospital Food Initiative is
expanding its reach: In the past year, 16 private hospitals have signed
on.
(
MORE: Goodbye, Big Soda: New York Becomes First City to Ban Large-Sized Soft Drinks)
Earlier this month, the city moved to ban the sale of big sodas and
other sugary drinks at fast-food restaurants and theaters, beginning in
March. Critics say the hospital initiative is yet another sign that
Bloomberg is running a “nanny state,” even though the guidelines are
voluntary and other cities — including Boston — have undertaken similar
efforts.
Hospitals say it would be hypocritical of them to serve unhealthy
food to patients who are often suffering from obesity and other health
problems.
“If there’s any place that should not allow
smoking
or try to make you eat healthy, you would think it’d be the hospitals,”
Bloomberg said Monday. “We’re doing what we should do and you’ll see, I
think, most of the private hospitals go along with it.”
The cafeteria crackdown will ban deep fryers, make leafy green salads
a mandatory option and allow only healthy snacks to be stocked near the
cafeteria entrance and at cash registers. At least half of all
sandwiches and salads must be made or served with whole grains.
Half-size sandwich portions must be available for sale.
(
MORE: The New York City Soda Ban, and a Brief History of Bloomberg’s Nudges)
“People sometimes right now don’t have
healthy options,” said Christine Curtis, the city Health Department’s
director of nutrition strategy. “So you are there at 2 in the morning
and maybe your only choice is soda and chips.”
Marcelle Scott brought her own chips and soda into the lobby of
Manhattan’s privately operated St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital — there was
no vending machine in sight — as she waited for her daughter to give
birth Monday. It wasn’t the first time the unemployed security guard
from the Bronx got the “munchies” for junk food to keep calm while
awaiting the outcome of a loved one’s medical procedure.
“I like my Snickers and my Mars Bars — especially if I’m nervous for somebody who’s inside,” she said.
(
MORE: Study: Obese Kids Have Less Sensitive Taste Buds)
Most hospitals have already overhauled their vending machines by
allowing only two types of 12-ounce high-calorie beverages at each
vending machine — and they must be featured on the lowest rack. Hospital
vending machines have also swapped out most baked goods for snacks like
granola bars and nuts.
At privately run Montefiore Medical Center, which operates several
hospitals in the Bronx, changes have been under way for a couple of
years.
“We took ice cream out of the cafeterias and began serving more whole
grains,” said Dr. Andrew Racine, chief medical officer. “We changed
white rice to brown rice.”
(
MORE: Should Parents Lose Custody of Their Extremely Obese Kids?)
Herbert Padilla, a retired Manhattan hairdresser, was sitting a few
feet from a giant coke machine Monday in an outpatient waiting area at
St. Luke’s-Roosevelt, where he was undergoing treatment for a nerve
disorder. He said that in general, he supports efforts to keep people
from overdosing on junk food, but “we shouldn’t be forced into this by a
hospital.”
“The mayor is going too far with this. It’s ridiculous,” he said.
“We’re being told what to eat and what to drink. We’re not living in a
free country anymore.”
—By MEGHAN BARR and VERENA DOBNIK
Read more:
http://healthland.time.com/2012/09/25/new-york-city-hospitals-crack-down-on-junk-food“People sometimes right now don’t have
healthy options,” said Christine Curtis, the city Health Department’s
director of nutrition strategy. “So you are there at 2 in the morning
and maybe your only choice is soda and chips.”
Marcelle Scott brought her own chips and soda into the lobby of
Manhattan’s privately operated St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital — there was
no vending machine in sight — as she waited for her daughter to give
birth Monday. It wasn’t the first time the unemployed security guard
from the Bronx got the “munchies” for junk food to keep calm while
awaiting the outcome of a loved one’s medical procedure.
“I like my Snickers and my Mars Bars — especially if I’m nervous for somebody who’s inside,” she said.
(
MORE: Study: Obese Kids Have Less Sensitive Taste Buds)
Most hospitals have already overhauled their vending machines by
allowing only two types of 12-ounce high-calorie beverages at each
vending machine — and they must be featured on the lowest rack. Hospital
vending machines have also swapped out most baked goods for snacks like
granola bars and nuts.
At privately run Montefiore Medical Center, which operates several
hospitals in the Bronx, changes have been under way for a couple of
years.
“We took ice cream out of the cafeterias and began serving more whole
grains,” said Dr. Andrew Racine, chief medical officer. “We changed
white rice to brown rice.”
(
MORE: Should Parents Lose Custody of Their Extremely Obese Kids?)
Herbert Padilla, a retired Manhattan hairdresser, was sitting a few
feet from a giant coke machine Monday in an outpatient waiting area at
St. Luke’s-Roosevelt, where he was undergoing treatment for a nerve
disorder. He said that in general, he supports efforts to keep people
from overdosing on junk food, but “we shouldn’t be forced into this by a
hospital.”
“The mayor is going too far with this. It’s ridiculous,” he said.
“We’re being told what to eat and what to drink. We’re not living in a
free country anymore.”
—By MEGHAN BARR and VERENA DOBNIK
Courtesy-Time
கருத்துகள் இல்லை:
கருத்துரையிடுக