Children
who eat the most fast-food tend to get significantly poorer scores in math,
science and reading tests, a new nationwide study that examined the habits of
over 8,500 young Americans reveals, RT.com reports.
Parents
now have a new matter of concern regarding their kids’ fast-food consumption,
as it correlates with future academic achievements, not to mention obesity and
skin problems.
Visits
to popular restaurants such as McDonald’s, Burger King, Pizza Hut and KFC, at
the age of 10, could have ill-effects three years later, in eighth grade, says
the report, published in Clinical Pediatrics journal this month.
“Research
has been focused on how children’s food consumption contributes to the child
obesity epidemic. Our findings provide evidence that eating fast food is linked
to another problem: poorer academic outcomes,”
leading author Kelly Purtell at Ohio State University told the Telegraph.
The
longitudinal study boasts models controlling numerous potentially-confusing
variables, including socioeconomic indicators, such as family income and place
of living, as well as physical activity and TV watching, that could influence
the results.
It
suggested two theories, explaining the impact of fast-food on learning
processes. According to one theory, it is the lack of a specific nutrient,
iron, usually associated with fast-food that slows down certain processes in
the brain. Another theory links degradation in academic achievements and
decreased attention to high amount of fat and added sugar.
The
scientists analyzed the rates of fast-food consumption among children to learn
that 10 percent had eaten it every day, another 10 percent had eaten it four to
six times in the previous week. Over half of the representative sample - more
than 8,500 people - or 52 percent had eaten fast food between one and three
times during the same period.
Most
impressive, the test results in science among the daily fast-food eaters saw an
average of 79 percent, while those who never ate fast food (29 percent) scored
83. The “clear and consistent
associations” are also observational in scores for reading and
math.
The researchers regard
pricing and taxes as “potential mechanisms for
reducing fast-food consumption.”
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