Literature DB >> 19343015

What people buy from fast-food restaurants: caloric content and menu item selection, New York City 2007.

Tamara Dumanovsky1, Cathy A Nonas, Christina Y Huang, Lynn D Silver, Mary T Bassett.   

Abstract

Fast-food restaurants provide a growing share of daily food intake, but little information is available in the public health literature about customer purchases. In order to establish baseline data on mean calorie intake, this study was completed in the Spring of 2007, before calorie labeling regulations went into effect in New York City. Receipts were collected from lunchtime customers, at randomly selected New York City fast-food chains. A supplementary survey was also administered to clarify receipt items. Calorie information was obtained through company websites and ascribed to purchases. Lunchtime purchases for 7,750 customers averaged 827 calories and were lowest for sandwich chains (734 calories); and highest for chicken chains (931 calories). Overall, one-third of purchases were over 1,000 calories, predominantly from hamburger chains (39%) and chicken chains (48%); sandwich chains were the lowest, with only 20% of purchases over 1,000 calories. "Combination meals" at hamburger chains accounted for 31% of all purchases and averaged over 1,200 calories; side orders accounted for almost one-third of these calories. Lunch meals at these fast-food chains are high in calorie content. Although calorie posting may help to raise awareness of the high calories in fast-food offerings, reducing portion sizes and changing popular combination meals to include lower calorie options could significantly reduce the average calorie content of purchases.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19343015     DOI: 10.1038/oby.2009.90

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)        ISSN: 1930-7381            Impact factor:   5.002


  13 in total

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2.  Consumer awareness of fast-food calorie information in New York City after implementation of a menu labeling regulation.

Authors:  Tamara Dumanovsky; Christina Y Huang; Mary T Bassett; Lynn D Silver
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Authors:  Vivica Kraak; Tessa Englund; Sarah Misyak; Elena Serrano
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9.  The effect of menu labeling with calories and exercise equivalents on food selection and consumption.

Authors:  Charles Platkin; Ming-Chin Yeh; Kimberly Hirsch; Ellen Weiss Wiewel; Chang-Yun Lin; Ho-Jui Tung; Victoria H Castellanos
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10.  Lower Dietary Inflammatory Index Scores Are Associated with Lower Glycemic Index Scores among College Students.

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