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Rudd Center Recent Publications
 
 
 Study Calls for Improved Labeling of Toddler Drinks,
 Which Lack the Oversight of Infant Formulas
 
 
Misleading labeling on 
formulas and milks marketed as "toddler drinks" may confuse parents 
about their healthfulness or necessity, according to a new study by 
researchers at the NYU College of Global Public Health and the Rudd 
Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut. 
The study, published in the journal Preventive Medicine ,
 examines how U.S. policies and regulations can support clear and 
truthful labeling of toddler drinks, given that international and U.S. 
health experts and pediatricians do not recommend them. To foster 
healthy toddler diets, the researchers recommend that the U.S. Food and 
Drug Administration provide guidance or propose regulations to ensure 
appropriate labeling of toddler drinks.
 
 
The Right Drink in Preschooler's LunchCan Pack A Healthy Punch
 
Parents who pack lunches for their young children can dramatically 
improve the nutrition quality of the meals by including a healthy 
beverage - either plain milk or 100 percent fruit juice, according to a 
new study by the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the 
University of Connecticut and the Michael & Susan Dell Center for 
Healthy Living at the University of Texas Health Science Center in 
Houston (UTHealth) School of Public Health in Austin.
 
"One of the most important things we found is that it is much easier 
than parents may think to pack a healthy lunch," said Maria 
Romo-Palafox, a UConn Rudd Center Postdoctoral Fellow and lead author of
 the study. "The simplest way to improve the nutrition quality of the 
lunch is to include a healthy beverage."
 
The findings of the study, published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics ,
 have important implications for reducing childhood obesity nationally. 
Approximately 12 million children (61 percent) spend an average of 33 
hours per week in early care and education centers away from home, where
 they consume two or more meals and snacks each day, and receive 50 
percent to 67 percent of their daily calorie requirements.
  
 State Laws Promoting School Lunch Make a Difference in Local Practices
 
Changes in school meal programs stemming from the Healthy, Hunger-Free 
Kids Act of 2010 have increased interest in strategies that expand 
student participation in school lunch and reduce the amount of wasted 
food. However, it is not clear what factors are associated with schools'
 use of such strategies.
 
A new study  by
 researchers from several universities, including the UConn Rudd Center,
 and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that 
schools in states with laws promoting school nutrition are doing more to
 advance school meals and increase student interest in school lunch than
 schools in states without such laws. The study was published in the 
Journal of Nutrition and Dietetics.
 
The researchers examined two types of school meal-related practices that
 are both associated with consumption of healthier items - promotional 
strategies such as taste tests, announcements, and posters; and 
providing students adequate time (at least 30 minutes) to eat their 
lunches.
 
"The results showed that these practices are more likely to be 
implemented at schools in states with laws encouraging or requiring 
schools to use these approaches," said Lindsey Turner, Research 
Associate Professor and Director of the Initiative for Healthy Schools 
in the College of Education at Boise State University, and the study's 
lead author. "Strategies like taste tests, seeking input from students, 
and inviting families to try school meals can all help increase student 
interest in school lunch, and this study shows that state laws are a 
promising way to support those changes."
  
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