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The Pros And Cons Of Banning Vending Machines

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A different outlook on banning vending machines Throughout the last years obesity among young children has grown. Many blame it on the presence of vending machines in schools, supporting the idea that they should be banned. Vending machines should not be banned because obesity is reflected by home influences, miscalculation of obesity, and vending machines help funding with schools. Vending machines should not be banned in school because developing healthy habits initially starts at home . In Why junk food isn’t making kids fat, Benjamin Radford said, "Schools only represent a small portion of children's food environment,"(4). This quote states that schools are only responsible for a small portion of children’s food environment which …show more content…

Today many nutritionist are finding there are also problems with this scale. According to Ashlea Deltar, the author of “Junk food in schools and childhood obesity“, stated that in many situations, OLS regressions (which are used to measure correlation between statistical data) may show no negative or significant relationship between junk food availability and and an individual's BMI (5.1). This statement means that considering the statistical data was used to find the correlation between junk food and obesity had errors, It should not be used to determine the relationship between junk food in vending machines, and obesity. In the article “Junk food in schools and childhood obesity”, the author, Ashlea Deltar, came to a conclusion after studying the BMI measurements among 5th grade students that the BMI scale does not account the amount of energy expelled after eating sugary foods (5.3). This statement means that even though sugary food consumed from vending machines, the Body Mass Index scale that only uses height and weight, does not take into consideration that the same sugar that is being claimed to cause obesity is being burned off after the children go outside to play. In “Junk food in schools and childhood obesity “, Ashlea Deltar stated “The body mass index only measures a person's height and weight, if a person is over 29.9 they are classified as obese but this scale does include the amount of muscle someone may have “(6.2 ). This quote supports the idea that obesity is being miscalculated because according to the quote the scale may mistake an individual's muscle as fat and a person that is perfectly fit and healthy may be classified as obese just because they did not fit into the specific

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