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Junk food

3-minute read

There are many great, healthy foods in Australia, but up to 40% of all the energy in the diets of Australian children comes from junk foods and drinks. That’s too high. It means many children are eating junk foods instead of healthier choices.

What is junk food?

Junk food is unhealthy food that includes sweet drinks, lollies, chocolates, sweet snacks, chips and crisps, crunchy snack foods, biscuits, cakes, most fast foods, pies, sausage rolls, jam and honey.

The food industry prefers terms like ‘extras’ and the Australian Dietary Guidelines call junk foods ‘discretionary choices’.

What’s wrong with junk foods?

Junk foods are high in starch, sugar, saturated fat, trans fat and salt, but low in fruit, vegetables, fibre and wholegrains. This means most junk foods don’t have the nutrients — vitamins, minerals and dietary fibre — that growing children need.

How much junk food can kids eat?

Children who are overweight and not very active should avoid junk food as much as possible.

Children whose weight is about right should eat more foods from the 5 food groups than junk food. Junk foods should never take the place of healthy foods needed for growth.

Children should not get into a junk food habit. Even if your child is slim and active now, they’ll need less food when they stop growing. However, an occasional junk food treat is probably ok.

Suggested serving sizes for junk foods

If your child is having junk food occasionally, a serve of 500 to 600 kilojoules is ok. This means:

Those servings are probably smaller than most people give.

Lunch box tips

Here are some tips for the lunch box:

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