Article Type
Changed
Wed, 03/27/2019 - 13:09
Display Headline
Policy & Practice : Want more health reform news? Subscribe to our podcast – search 'Policy & Practice' in the iTunes store

School Lunch Bill Approved

About 115,000 children will be newly eligible for free or reduced-price lunches under a bill President Obama signed in December. The law authorizes $4.5 billion to increase reimbursement to school districts by 6 cents per meal and to expand after-school and summer food programs for children from low-income families. Under the legislation, schools must reduce the fat and calorie content of meals and establish policies to combat childhood obesity. The legislation “makes significant progress toward ending child hunger and obesity by expanding access to federal child nutrition programs and improving the nutritional value they provide,” said American Academy of Pediatrics President O. Marion Burton in a statement.

Kids Don't Eat Like Parents

Parents' diets may not have as much influence over their children's as previously thought, a study found. The report in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health combined data from 24 previous studies and found only a weak association between what parents eat and the diets their children adopt. The researchers, mainly from Johns Hopkins University, noted that most of the studies had been based on small samples and that findings varied significantly. Child self-reported intakes showed a weaker correlation with parents' diets than other assessments, the researchers said.

The End of Measles and Rubella

A group organized by the Pan American Health Organization is developing a plan to eventually confirm the elimination of measles, rubella, and congenital rubella in the Americas. The expert committee is modeling some of its strategy on the drives to confirm the elimination of endemic smallpox and polio from the region, according to the announcement of the panel's creation. The Americas reported its last endemic case of measles in November 2002, with all subsequent cases having been imported or tied to an imported case. The last endemic case of rubella in the Americas was reported in February 2009.

Fewer Drugs, Fewer Emergencies

Emergency department visits for adverse reactions to cough and cold medications fell by more than one-half for children younger than age 2 years following the withdrawal from the market of medications labeled for infants, according to a study in Pediatrics. However, children continue to ingest over-the-counter cough and cold drugs accidentally, and that problem needs to be addressed to truly curb the number of drug-reaction emergencies, the authors said. Manufacturers voluntarily withdrew the products for infants in 2007, after numerous reports of adverse reactions. When the researchers compared data from the 14 months prior to and after the withdrawal, they found that ED visits related to cough and cold drug reactions in children younger than 2 fell from 28% to 13% of total emergency visits. “Further reductions likely will require packaging improvements to reduce harm from unsupervised ingestions and continued education about avoiding cough and cold medications use for young children,” the authors said.

Service Corps Wins Funding

The National Health Service Corps will receive $290 million in new funding from last year's health care reform legislation to address shortages in the primary care workforce, the Department of Health and Human Services said. By the end of 2011, more than 10,800 clinicians will be caring for more than 11 million people, more than tripling the corps workforce since 2008, according to HHS. With even more funding from the legislation, the corps is expected to support more than 15,000 new primary care professionals by 2015, the agency said. Also under the legislation, primary care professionals will for the first time have the option of working half-time to fulfill their service obligations. The corps offers primary care medical, dental, and mental health clinicians up to $60,000 to repay student loans in exchange for 2 years of service at health care facilities in medically underserved areas.

McDonald's Sued Over Toys

A California mother of two, with help from the food-activist group the Center for Science in the Public Interest, is suing McDonald's for using toys to entice children to demand and eat what she says are nutritionally unsound Happy Meals. The class action lawsuit, filed in California Superior Court in San Francisco, argues that McDonald's intentionally targets children with its toys and advertising of meals that contain large amounts of fried food and sugary drinks. “I am concerned about the health of my children and feel that McDonald's should be a very limited part of their diet and their childhood experience,” said plaintiff Monet Parham in a statement. “But as other busy, working moms and dads know, we have to say 'no' to our young children so many times, and McDonald's makes that so much harder to do. I object to the fact that McDonald's is getting into my kids' heads without my permission.” The suit asks the court to prohibit McDonald's from advertising Happy Meals with toys in California.

Article PDF
Author and Disclosure Information

Publications
Topics
Author and Disclosure Information

Author and Disclosure Information

Article PDF
Article PDF

School Lunch Bill Approved

About 115,000 children will be newly eligible for free or reduced-price lunches under a bill President Obama signed in December. The law authorizes $4.5 billion to increase reimbursement to school districts by 6 cents per meal and to expand after-school and summer food programs for children from low-income families. Under the legislation, schools must reduce the fat and calorie content of meals and establish policies to combat childhood obesity. The legislation “makes significant progress toward ending child hunger and obesity by expanding access to federal child nutrition programs and improving the nutritional value they provide,” said American Academy of Pediatrics President O. Marion Burton in a statement.

Kids Don't Eat Like Parents

Parents' diets may not have as much influence over their children's as previously thought, a study found. The report in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health combined data from 24 previous studies and found only a weak association between what parents eat and the diets their children adopt. The researchers, mainly from Johns Hopkins University, noted that most of the studies had been based on small samples and that findings varied significantly. Child self-reported intakes showed a weaker correlation with parents' diets than other assessments, the researchers said.

The End of Measles and Rubella

A group organized by the Pan American Health Organization is developing a plan to eventually confirm the elimination of measles, rubella, and congenital rubella in the Americas. The expert committee is modeling some of its strategy on the drives to confirm the elimination of endemic smallpox and polio from the region, according to the announcement of the panel's creation. The Americas reported its last endemic case of measles in November 2002, with all subsequent cases having been imported or tied to an imported case. The last endemic case of rubella in the Americas was reported in February 2009.

Fewer Drugs, Fewer Emergencies

Emergency department visits for adverse reactions to cough and cold medications fell by more than one-half for children younger than age 2 years following the withdrawal from the market of medications labeled for infants, according to a study in Pediatrics. However, children continue to ingest over-the-counter cough and cold drugs accidentally, and that problem needs to be addressed to truly curb the number of drug-reaction emergencies, the authors said. Manufacturers voluntarily withdrew the products for infants in 2007, after numerous reports of adverse reactions. When the researchers compared data from the 14 months prior to and after the withdrawal, they found that ED visits related to cough and cold drug reactions in children younger than 2 fell from 28% to 13% of total emergency visits. “Further reductions likely will require packaging improvements to reduce harm from unsupervised ingestions and continued education about avoiding cough and cold medications use for young children,” the authors said.

Service Corps Wins Funding

The National Health Service Corps will receive $290 million in new funding from last year's health care reform legislation to address shortages in the primary care workforce, the Department of Health and Human Services said. By the end of 2011, more than 10,800 clinicians will be caring for more than 11 million people, more than tripling the corps workforce since 2008, according to HHS. With even more funding from the legislation, the corps is expected to support more than 15,000 new primary care professionals by 2015, the agency said. Also under the legislation, primary care professionals will for the first time have the option of working half-time to fulfill their service obligations. The corps offers primary care medical, dental, and mental health clinicians up to $60,000 to repay student loans in exchange for 2 years of service at health care facilities in medically underserved areas.

McDonald's Sued Over Toys

A California mother of two, with help from the food-activist group the Center for Science in the Public Interest, is suing McDonald's for using toys to entice children to demand and eat what she says are nutritionally unsound Happy Meals. The class action lawsuit, filed in California Superior Court in San Francisco, argues that McDonald's intentionally targets children with its toys and advertising of meals that contain large amounts of fried food and sugary drinks. “I am concerned about the health of my children and feel that McDonald's should be a very limited part of their diet and their childhood experience,” said plaintiff Monet Parham in a statement. “But as other busy, working moms and dads know, we have to say 'no' to our young children so many times, and McDonald's makes that so much harder to do. I object to the fact that McDonald's is getting into my kids' heads without my permission.” The suit asks the court to prohibit McDonald's from advertising Happy Meals with toys in California.

School Lunch Bill Approved

About 115,000 children will be newly eligible for free or reduced-price lunches under a bill President Obama signed in December. The law authorizes $4.5 billion to increase reimbursement to school districts by 6 cents per meal and to expand after-school and summer food programs for children from low-income families. Under the legislation, schools must reduce the fat and calorie content of meals and establish policies to combat childhood obesity. The legislation “makes significant progress toward ending child hunger and obesity by expanding access to federal child nutrition programs and improving the nutritional value they provide,” said American Academy of Pediatrics President O. Marion Burton in a statement.

Kids Don't Eat Like Parents

Parents' diets may not have as much influence over their children's as previously thought, a study found. The report in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health combined data from 24 previous studies and found only a weak association between what parents eat and the diets their children adopt. The researchers, mainly from Johns Hopkins University, noted that most of the studies had been based on small samples and that findings varied significantly. Child self-reported intakes showed a weaker correlation with parents' diets than other assessments, the researchers said.

The End of Measles and Rubella

A group organized by the Pan American Health Organization is developing a plan to eventually confirm the elimination of measles, rubella, and congenital rubella in the Americas. The expert committee is modeling some of its strategy on the drives to confirm the elimination of endemic smallpox and polio from the region, according to the announcement of the panel's creation. The Americas reported its last endemic case of measles in November 2002, with all subsequent cases having been imported or tied to an imported case. The last endemic case of rubella in the Americas was reported in February 2009.

Fewer Drugs, Fewer Emergencies

Emergency department visits for adverse reactions to cough and cold medications fell by more than one-half for children younger than age 2 years following the withdrawal from the market of medications labeled for infants, according to a study in Pediatrics. However, children continue to ingest over-the-counter cough and cold drugs accidentally, and that problem needs to be addressed to truly curb the number of drug-reaction emergencies, the authors said. Manufacturers voluntarily withdrew the products for infants in 2007, after numerous reports of adverse reactions. When the researchers compared data from the 14 months prior to and after the withdrawal, they found that ED visits related to cough and cold drug reactions in children younger than 2 fell from 28% to 13% of total emergency visits. “Further reductions likely will require packaging improvements to reduce harm from unsupervised ingestions and continued education about avoiding cough and cold medications use for young children,” the authors said.

Service Corps Wins Funding

The National Health Service Corps will receive $290 million in new funding from last year's health care reform legislation to address shortages in the primary care workforce, the Department of Health and Human Services said. By the end of 2011, more than 10,800 clinicians will be caring for more than 11 million people, more than tripling the corps workforce since 2008, according to HHS. With even more funding from the legislation, the corps is expected to support more than 15,000 new primary care professionals by 2015, the agency said. Also under the legislation, primary care professionals will for the first time have the option of working half-time to fulfill their service obligations. The corps offers primary care medical, dental, and mental health clinicians up to $60,000 to repay student loans in exchange for 2 years of service at health care facilities in medically underserved areas.

McDonald's Sued Over Toys

A California mother of two, with help from the food-activist group the Center for Science in the Public Interest, is suing McDonald's for using toys to entice children to demand and eat what she says are nutritionally unsound Happy Meals. The class action lawsuit, filed in California Superior Court in San Francisco, argues that McDonald's intentionally targets children with its toys and advertising of meals that contain large amounts of fried food and sugary drinks. “I am concerned about the health of my children and feel that McDonald's should be a very limited part of their diet and their childhood experience,” said plaintiff Monet Parham in a statement. “But as other busy, working moms and dads know, we have to say 'no' to our young children so many times, and McDonald's makes that so much harder to do. I object to the fact that McDonald's is getting into my kids' heads without my permission.” The suit asks the court to prohibit McDonald's from advertising Happy Meals with toys in California.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Policy & Practice : Want more health reform news? Subscribe to our podcast – search 'Policy & Practice' in the iTunes store
Display Headline
Policy & Practice : Want more health reform news? Subscribe to our podcast – search 'Policy & Practice' in the iTunes store
Article Source

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article

Article PDF Media