Academic Integrity: tutoring, explanations, and feedback — we don’t complete graded work or submit on a student’s behalf.

Read through the USDA (https://www.choosemyplate.gov/MyPlate) recommendations fo

ID: 3466412 • Letter: R

Question

Read through the USDA (https://www.choosemyplate.gov/MyPlate) recommendations for a balanced diet and First Lady Michelle Obama’s school lunch movement (http://healthland.time.com/2013/08/29/why-some-schools-are-saying-no-thanks-to-the-school-lunch-program/). Healthy eating has gained significant traction in recent history; however, the obesity epidemic, especially in children, remains.

Do we have a social responsibility to improve the quality of school lunches or does outside intervention take away from the school’s ability to educate students to make healthy choices? Examine this idea in your response, making sure to address the connection between poverty and obesity, as well as how this issue might impact a child’s overall healthy development during childhood.

Explanation / Answer

Answer:

In order to maintain health and wellness of our children, it is the social responsibility to improve the quality of school lunches. Because children are future of our society and nation.obesity is one of the major problems of the 21st century in the U.S. because most of the diet of our children is the junk foods which contains high calorific value.due to change in eating habits and sleeping pattern situation is getting worse day by day.

DSM’s delineation of anorexia, bulimia, and binge-eating disorder give adequate coverage to the kinds of eating disorders to which men might be prone.

Typical eating disorders in men are anorexia, bulimia, and binge-eating disorder

Diagnostic criteria for an eating disorder(s) that would encompass the sorts of eating problems to which men are prone:

• Recurrent episodes of binge eating.

• Overeating.

• Continuous eating until reached to uncomfortable conditions

• Overeating without any hunger sensation.

• eating alone due to embarrassment.

• feeling depressed and guilty after overeating.

some of the cognitive, emotional, biological, and psychosocial factors behind men’s disordered eating are:

• The lower level of self-esteem

• Separation of parents

• BMI problems(high or low)

• Peer group pressure

• Psychological disorders

• Social group pressure