• Home

Bernd Meier

Home childhood obesity schools Boone County school bans all food at school birthday celebrations, partly in an effort to combat childhood obesity

Boone County school bans all food at school birthday celebrations, partly in an effort to combat childhood obesity

Written by Unknown on 6:44 PM ,
Burlington Elementary School in Boone County has banned all food during birthday celebrations, including ice cream and cake, as part of its new wellness policy, Jessica Brown reports for The Cincinnati Enquirer.

Celebrations are still allowed and can include non-food treats, Brown writes. Burlington is one of very few schools to make this move in efforts to make sure students are getting healthy food at school and to also decrease celebration time, which takes away from classroom time.

"We're finding it's difficult to be the first," Valerie Bailey, who is on the PTA and on the committee that helped craft the policy, told Brown. "Parents say it's not fair. But we hope it sends a message to the parents and kids, especially with the obesity rate being so high, and puts a bug in their ear."

"To be clear, the federal government does not ban birthday cake. Nor does it ban pizza parties or bake sales – all notions that have gotten a lot of attention in recent years," Brown writes.

The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act does require all schools to have a "wellness policy," which is determined by the individual schools and is where some schools have created this type of restriction.

Burlington's main goal when it revised its wellness policy was to address the growing childhood obesity rate, Brown reports.

"About 37 percent of our children are at risk (for obesity) or obese," Kathy Reutman, who is in charge of making sure the wellness policies for Boone County schools meet federal guidelines, told Brown. "It's not up to us to tell parents what to do," she said. "But when children are in our care we make sure that nothing gets in the way of them and their learning. Food allergies or too much sugar get in the way of that."

Students have gotten creative at Burlington to accommodate this change, with one student bringing in jump ropes for the class for a jump rope party to celebrate his birthday, Brown notes.

The Enquirer reports that they have found only one other local school district with a similar rule, Southgate, a one-school district in Campbell County and reports that while rare locally, birthday-cake bans are "springing up elsewhere across the country."
Tweet
Newer Post Older Post

Related Articles:


Beshear cites signs toward better h...

Are nutrition rules for schools and...

Study finds kids eat too much pizza...

Popular Posts

  • County Health Rankings look familiar, but show that some counties overcame bad factors to have encouraging outcomes
    The 2015 County Health Rankings for Kentucky, compiled by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute in collaboration with the...
  • Student loses 175 lbs. in 14 months after gastric-sleeve surgery
    Elizabeth Whitt and Don McNay Elizabeth Whitt, an Eastern Kentucky University communications major from Richmond, Ky., decided to have gast...
  • Ten common myths about diabetes busted
    Kentucky ranks 17th in diabetes, and many Kentuckians are newly diagnosed every year with the disease, usually Type 2 diabetes. The diagnosi...
  • At least 14 counties had vaccination rates in 2011-12 below level experts say is needed to protect kindergartners from measles
    As concern about the spread of measles from lack of vaccination grows, many Kentucky counties probably have vaccination rates below the mini...
  • New health-related laws deal with heroin, dating violence, end-of-life care, prescriptions, colon-cancer and newborn screening
    By Melissa Patrick Kentucky Health News FRANKFORT, Ky. – The Kentucky General Assembly passed several health-related bills this session, inc...
  • #ThanksMichelleObama: Students use social media to voice their unhappiness with revamped school lunches
    School kids around the country are tweeting pictures of their unappetizing school lunches and blaming the most prominent advocate for health...
  • Ky. Rural Health Association backs statewide smoking ban
    The Kentucky Rural Health Association is asking Kentuckians to contact their legislators and advocate passage of a statewide smoking ban in...
  • Study finds that early memory loss can be a predictor of dementia
    Experiencing memory loss early in life could be a cause for concern about dementia later in life. Research from the University of Kentucky ...
  • Panel OKs new medical-order form that would clearly define a person's end-of-life wishes on nutrition, hydration, medication
    A bill to create a medical order form that details a person's wishes for end-of-life care passed the Senate Health and Welfare Committee...
  • Kentucky is one of three states to get Walmart Foundation money to expand farm-to-school programs
    Kentucky will use money from  The Walmart Foundation  to partner with the  National Farm to School Network  to expand efforts to get more lo...
Bernd Meier © . All Rights Reserved. Powered by Blogger