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			 Combination meals include an entrée (such as a burger), a side dish 
			(such as fries), and a beverage (typically a soda), for less money 
			than it would cost to buy each item separately. 
 More than one third of American children and adults eat at a fast 
			food restaurant each day, which is troubling because previous 
			research has shown that restaurant food is generally unhealthy, lead 
			author Kelsey Vercammen, a PhD student at the Harvard Chan School of 
			Public Health in Boston, told Reuters Health by email.
 
 In 2017 and 2018, Vercammen and colleagues used online menus from 34 
			U.S. fast food and fast casual restaurants to identify combination 
			meal options, with nutrition information for each item obtained from 
			MenuStat.
 
 The researchers analyzed three options for each meal: the default 
			option, as advertised on the menu, and two versions of the meal with 
			substitutions (a low-calorie, or minimum option, and a high-calorie, 
			or maximum option).
 
 
			
			 
			They compared their results to the Healthier Restaurant Meal 
			Guidelines (https://bit.ly/303izY6), which say an adult meal should 
			contain no more than 700 calories, with less than 10%, or less than 
			70, of those calories coming from saturated fat and less than 35%, 
			or less than 245 calories, from sugars.
 
 The average combination meal, in its default form, contained 1,193 
			calories, with 14 grams of saturated fat (126 calories) and 68 grams 
			of sugar (272 calories),
 
 The guidelines say an adult meal should contain no more than 770 
			milligrams of sodium, but the average default option contained 2,110 
			milligrams, the authors found.
 
 Making changes to the default combinations - such as substituting a 
			sugar-free beverage or plain water for a sugary drink, or removing 
			toppings and dipping sauces from entrées - resulted in substantial 
			changes to the overall calorie and nutrient content of a given meal, 
			Vercammen said.
 
			
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			In both breakfast and lunch/dinner combination meals, beverages were 
			the largest driver of increases in calories and sugar, whereas 
			entrees and sides were the largest drivers of increases in saturated 
			fat and sodium, she and her colleagues report in the American 
			Journal of Preventive Medicine.
 "We were surprised at just how much realistic customer modifications 
			can change the nutrient profile of a meal," Vercammen said, pointing 
			out the maximum combination meal had nearly 500 more calories and 
			significantly more sugar, sodium, and saturated fat compared to the 
			default meal in the study.
 
 Because it lacked sales data, the study can't tell which meal 
			options were actually popular. And the findings can't be generalized 
			to other types of restaurants, as the study looked only at fast food 
			and fast casual restaurants.
 
 Still, the results show that combination meals and especially 
			"default" combination meals are generally not very healthy, said 
			Tamara Dubowitz, a food policy researcher at RAND Corporation in 
			Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who was not involved in the study.
 
 Vercammen and colleagues believe government policies that regulate 
			what restaurants serve, such as when local laws require children's 
			combination meals to include only healthy beverages instead of 
			sugary drinks, are an important public health tool.
 
 Calorie labeling on menus, or making ingredients and nutritional 
			composition more understandable for the consumer, are also likely to 
			help, Dubowitz said in an email.
 
 "Our environment makes it hard to be healthy and to eat healthy," 
			Dubowitz said.
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/33WZyc1 American Journal of Preventive 
			Medicine, online August 1, 2019.
 
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