首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Mexico Puts Its Children on a Diet Mexico puts its schoolchildren on a diet at the beginning of the year. But as often happe
Mexico Puts Its Children on a Diet Mexico puts its schoolchildren on a diet at the beginning of the year. But as often happe
admin
2012-06-20
48
问题
Mexico Puts Its Children on a Diet
Mexico puts its schoolchildren on a diet at the beginning of the year. But as often happens with New Year’s resolutions, there are many ways to cheat. Here is some of what is allowed for sale in schools under new guidelines that are intended to combat childhood obesity: lollipops, potato and corn chips in multiple guises (外观), and cookies complemented by marshmallow or chocolate filling.
But the message is getting through, sort of. Portions verge on the miniature (小型); sugar is limited; the chips are baked, not fried; and soft drinks are banned in elementary schools.
"My doctor told me that I had to drink water to look after my health," said Santiago Daniel Torres, a bulky 14-year-old. Gone are the grease-drenched sandwiches and fried pork rinds that he used to buy. "They banned them," he said as classmates wandered by clutching foil packets of cookies and chips. "More water, that’s better."
By all measures, Mexico is one of the fattest countries in the world, and the obesity starts early. One in three children is overweight or obese, according to the government. So the nation’s health and education officials stepped in last year to limit what schools could sell at recess.
The officials quickly became snared (诱使......上当) in a web of special interests led by Mexico’s powerful snack food companies, which found support from regulators in the Ministry of the Economy. The result was a knot of rules that went into effect on Jan. 1.
"What’s left is a regulatory Frankenstein," said Alejandro Calvillo, Mexico’s most vocal opponent of junk food, particularly soft drinks, in the schools. "They are surrendering a captive market to the companies to generate consumers at a young age. "
Mexican officials argue that the new rules are successful, even though parts of the original proposal have been relaxed. "We managed to do the most important things, which was to pull out the soft drinks and to get the composition of foods changed," said Dr. Jose Angel Cordova, Mexico’s health minister. He estimates that one-third of Mexico’s health care spending goes to fight diseases related to obesity.
The snack food companies’ concerns may go beyond their sales in Mexican schools, Dr. Cordova said. If Mexico sets a precedent, he said, other governments may follow. "We had to negotiate and negotiate, and it suddenly got complicated," Dr. Cordova said. "They tried to drag out the timing until finally we just imposed and we applied the rules."
The education minister, Alonso Lujambio, said the new rules had removed 90 percent of fried foods from schools. "That is a very aggressive change," he said. But he stopped short at a suggestion that all junk food should be banned from schools. "The central issue is to educate children to exercise moderation in what they eat and emphasize healthier products," Mr. Lujambio said.
It is a high-minded approach at odds with the scene during a recent recess period at a downtown Mexico City middle school.
When the bell rang at 10:50 a. m. , children streamed onto a tiny patio, where Marisela Beltran was selling chicken sandwiches. Mindful of the new guidelines, Ms. Beltran has been experimenting with healthier foods, bringing oranges and once offering a salad of chopped nuts, raisins, lettuce and apples. It was not a popular offering, said her nephew Francisco Peralta, who sells the school’s packaged snack food.
"When we bring things like that to the patio, they attack me in there," he said gesturing at his closetlike store, where cookies, bran bars and juices were displayed on wooden shelves.
The food companies, including multinationals in Europe and the United States, say their new portfolio of school snacks are evidence that they are committed to combating the problem. But they also complain that they are forced to compete with street vendors (小贩) who gather outside school gates to sell inexpensive junk food to children as they head home.
"It isn’t an issue of just a moment; it is many moments in many days," said Luis Rene Martinez Souverveille, director of corporate affairs for Grupo Bimbo, a Mexican baked goods and snack company that owns several brands in the United States, including Entenmann’s.
Industry officials argue that they are easy targets. "I think in some sense this is a very difficult problem, and the population, society, wants to have a magic wand and wants to blame somebody for something that at the end of the day is related to personal responsibility and personal lifestyles," said Jaime Zabludovsky, the executive president of ConMexico, the consumer products trade association.
Difficult as the problem may be, at least one school principal has found a simple solution. The snack food salesmen "come knocking at the door, and we just say no," said the principal, Maria Teresa Zamorano.
Since she took over at Estado de Quintana Roo Elementary School in a working-class neighborhood of Mexico City in August, Ms. Zamorano has remade the recess menu.
On one day recently, there was a hot meal of rice and tortillas, prickly (多刺的) pear leaves with eggs and onions, and squash with soft white cheese. Her students could choose among fresh cucumber, jicama, watermelon slices and cooked corn kernels. For dessert, there were popsicles and miniature cups of gelatin.
"The most important thing is that the children learn for themselves, that they talk to their parents themselves," Ms. Zamorano said.
It seems to be working at her school. Veronica Cruz Hernandez now sends her 6-year-old daughter, Fatima, to class with a packed lunch of a ham sandwich, sliced mango, cucumber sticks and water. No more soft drinks. "She doesn’t want to be fat like me," Ms. Cruz said.
At the end of the school day, the children poured out of the gates onto a narrow street cluttered with vendors selling candy, chips, nachos and ice cream. Many bought a snack for the walk home. Still, they have not forgotten the lessons from school.
"Almost all of the girls eat fruit," said Leticia Garcia Gutierrez, 11. Then she added: "Sometimes we eat candy. But that’s because we’re kids."
The chief purpose of the new rules taken by the Mexican government is to______.
选项
A、promote the health level of the children
B、change the formation of snack food companies
C、eliminate soft drinks and change the food composition
D、make the national economy develop
答案
C
解析
同义转述题。由定位句可知,政府采用的新政策是为了淘汰软饮料并改变孩子们的食物搭配,由此可得出答案为C)。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/JMf7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Give5dollarstochildrenmorethan15yearsold.B、Allowayearlyincreaseastheirchildrengrowolder.C、Teachtheirchild
A、Sheholdsthatonedollarforeachyearoftheageisfarfromenough.B、Shebelievesthatchildrenshouldbegivenmorethan
MostAmericansstartschoolattheageoffivewhentheyenter【B1】______Childrendonotreallystudyatthistime.Theyonly【B2】
MostAmericansstartschoolattheageoffivewhentheyenter【B1】______Childrendonotreallystudyatthistime.Theyonly【B2】
MostAmericansstartschoolattheageoffivewhentheyenter【B1】______Childrendonotreallystudyatthistime.Theyonly【B2】
MostAmericansstartschoolattheageoffivewhentheyenter【B1】______Childrendonotreallystudyatthistime.Theyonly【B2】
ThevastmajorityofchildreninBritain(87%)attendstate(localauthority)schoolswhichprovide【S1】______educationfromtheage
ThevastmajorityofchildreninBritain(87%)attendstate(localauthority)schoolswhichprovide【S1】______educationfromtheage
随机试题
用酸式滴定管滴定时,应将右手无名指和小指向手心弯曲,轻轻抵住尖嘴,其余三指控制旋塞转动。 ()
阅读冰心《往事》(一之十四)中的一段文字,然后回答下面小题。我们谈着海潮,海风,海舟……最后谈到海的女神。涵说:“假如有位海的女神,她一定‘艳如桃李,冷若冰霜’的。”我不觉笑问:“这话怎么讲?”涵也笑道:“你看云霞的海上,何等明媚;风雨的海
放射诊疗工作管理按照诊疗风险和技术难易程度分类不包括
合伙型基金合同的必备内容不包括()。
某上市公司的股价为10元,税前利润为0.5元,税后利润为0.4元,每股股息为0.2元,此股票的市盈率是( )倍。
对发生法律效力的判决,一方拒绝履行的,对方当事人可以向人民法院申请执行,申请执行的期限从法律文书规定履行期间的最后一日起开始计算,如双方均为法人,该期限是()。
当前我国“三农”问题分配阶段的基本特征、基本政策是以工促农、以城带乡,其实质是城乡之间的()。
WhichofthefollowingisthecharacteristicofScotland?
学校事故的责任形式主要是()。
社会主义核心价值体系的灵魂是()。
最新回复
(
0
)