Better behavior through better eating? The high price of cheap food
Sure it costs more to feed your children real food than processed junk. But what price might you be paying to feed your kids cheaply? How about lack of focus, bad behavior, poor school performance, even violence or crime?
“Can we cut crime by changing cafeteria menus?” is the question Christina Pirello answers in the Huffington Post this week.
Pirello tells about several instances that prove that feeding people better can result in dramatic improvements in their behavior. From schools to prisons, garbage in means garbage out, but healthier eating can clearly net measurably better behavior. School performance was also shown to improve with better eating.
Being treated with respect, being deemed worthy of decent food, might contribute to better behavior, I believe. But clear results tied strictly to nutrition were also found in a study with placebos.
A better diet dramatically transformed student behavior in a Wisconsin school. In over…
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