NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday 19 September 2002
CONTACT:
Simon Chaitowitz, Communications Director
tel: 202-686-2210, ext. 309; simonc@pcrm.org
USDA Pork Purchases Threaten Children’s Health, Warn Doctors
Washington, D.C. USDA
farm bail-out plan to buy up to $30 million of pork products for
school lunches
and other government feeding programs jeopardizes children’s
health, say nutrition experts with the Physicians Committee for
Responsible Medicine (PCRM).
In a letter sent today to Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman, PCRM calls on the agency to stop dumping high-fat and cholesterol-laden pork products into schools in order to fatten farmers’ incomes. The USDAfive of whose top officials were recently exposed as having links to the meat industryannounced its latest plan to bail out pork producers last week.
“If farmers are having trouble
finding markets for pork, the government should assist them in transitioning
to healthier products, not continue to push meat on school children,”
says PCRM president and nutrition researcher Neal
D. Barnard, M.D. “With childhood obesity at an all-time
high and so many children showing high cholesterol levels, we’ve
got to get the pork out of the school lunch program.”
According to a USDA news release, the agency purchased 421 million pounds of beef, pork, lamb, eggs, chicken, and other animal products in fiscal year 2001. The total expenditure, including fruit and vegetable products, was worth over $1 billion. Purchases are donated to various government feeding programs through the Agricultural Marketing Service. News releases announcing upcoming purchases routinely explain how the purchases are meant to boost economic conditions. The USDA has come under much criticism lately for its conflicting mandate of protecting public health and promoting industry.
In PCRM’s letter to Secretary Veneman, staff dietitian Jennifer Keller, R.D., writes, “The food currently provided through the National School Lunch Program has not kept pace with what we know today to be truly healthy and nutritious food. Rather, the foods provided in the program under the guise of good nutritionchili cheese dogs, pepperoni pizza, cheeseburgers, and pork chopsare there to prop up farm incomes, and are part of the problem that has created a generation of overweight children.” To reverse these trends, PCRM recommends the USDA encourage children to follow healthy, vegetarian eating habits.
For an interview with a PCRM nutritionist or a copy of PCRM’s recent School Lunch Report Card, please call Simon Chaitowitz at 202-686-2210, ext. 309, or simonc@pcrm.org.
Founded in 1985,
the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is a nonprofit
health organization that promotes preventive medicine, especially
good nutrition. PCRM also conducts clinical research studies, opposes
unethical human experimentation, and promotes alternatives to animal
research.
-30-
Media
Center | Health | Research
| About PCRM | Catalog
| Join Us | Search
| Site Index | Home
The site does
not provide medical or legal advice. This Web site is for information purposes
only.
Full Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
|